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Our felt shillies resemble the traditional slate shillies but are made of 100% Herdwick wool. They make the perfect garden mulch, enriching the soil and acting as a protective shield to the natural elements.
They are:
The felt shillies can be used on individual potted plants or across beds and will help to ensure strong plant growth throughout the whole year.
You will need approximately 1kg of felt shillies per 1 square metre of soil.
And we’re delighted to have coffee sacks from Carvetii Coffee that we can use for our packaging – they are lovely things in their own right! You can use them for extra mulch or keep them as a useful sack to put things in.
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These felt garden mulch shillies are made from 100% sheep’s wool which is totally biodegradable. Herdwick sheep’s wool to be precise! You can read more about how we source our wool here.
Our chimney draught excluders are made to fit flues of all shapes and sizes, meaning that we’re quite often left with lots of scrap Herdwick felt. We hate waste at Chimney Sheep, so we cut the scraps into even smaller pieces and the result is a garden mulch that works brilliantly and bears a pleasing resemblance to the traditional slate shillies!
The benefits of mulch are widespread, both for domestic gardeners and widescale horticulturalists, farmers and foresters.
Here are a few of the benefits of mulch:
Gardening mulch is commonly used to enrich the soil around plants, by acting as a protective shield. Mulch can be made of cardboard, straw, bark chippings or it could be something like our jute mulch mats. Wool, however, is also a great mulch with so many naturally occurring properties that help to protect plants and ensure they stay strong and healthy.
Our shillies make a great mulch because they are:
The great thing about these shillies is that they can be used in pots for individual plants or across beds to protect a whole area. You will need approximately 1kg of felt shillies per 1 square metre of soil.
To use them on potted plants, just pile up the shillies around the base of the plant and across the diameter of the pot.
For use on beds, spread them out across the whole area. If there are particular plants in the bed that need an extra bit of protection (delicate plants or ones that are vulnerable to slugs), ensure you give pile the wool shillies around the base of the plant.
If you find that your shillies tend to blow away in the wind, you can water them in which will help to make them slightly weightier.
Our felt shillies are now packaged using recycled coffee sacks which can also be used in your garden. They could also be used as mulch, a bit like our jute mulch roll as they are completely biodegradable or to collect leaves in the autumn to create a rich leaf mulch.
Yes, the prickly surface of the wool does act as a natural slug repellent. However, to increase the felt shillies snail and slug repelling properties, we recommend that you also try this simple recipe for slug repelling garlic water.
Andrea Devine-Clark –
I bought these as a trail to see how far a bag would go. I was pleasantly surprised at how big a 3 kg bag was. I’ve put some around my strawberries at home and the rhubarb at the allotment. Both plant types are looking healthy the mint that’s with the strawberries has gone mental!
I am just about to purchase another large bag to start to build the ground the strawberries at the allotment. I am torn with ordering some pellets too. I use to use pellets all the time before they became super expensive. I found that as long as you put the pellets around the plant ensuring there was no leaf bridging the gap between pellet and plant they did deter slug/snails adequately enough compared to no deterrent.
The down side to the shillies are they can blow away, so not so good around largely spaced out plants on the allotment and the birds seem to like them too. However, that said I’m still super happy
Wendy –
I use them for lining the bottom of plant pots before adding the plant. They work on two fronts providing nutrients to the plant as they rot down and they also hold quite a lot of water when wet which the plant can use. They are also a good slug and snail repellent when added round the top of the plant you want to protect. You get a large bag for your money.
Susan –
its been too cold to get out in the garden since I bought these, but I have already sprinkled some around the pots and there seems to have been less disturbance by the squirrels… A good use of a byproduct of making Chimney sheep.
Stephanie Obrien –
I got a big box of of felties, earlier in the year used it to line my hanging baskets and pots but the birdies kept stealing it for their nests. Once I dismantled the hanging baskets, so added more plus extra out doe the birdies I could still feel some moisture due to the felties and could see it breaking down very well. Will be purchasing more soon!
GezKAY –
I have used this product around the tops of pots and plants that are half-hardy. It should protect the roots.
Easy to place and hopefully will keep slugs at bay too!
Nomes –
These are great and have a multitude of uses. I used them to make my own chimney block (to stop the cat shimmying up there). But I believe you can also use them as a slug and snail block. You get quite a bundle for your money. My chimney block is brilliant and cuts draughty too.