Joints between paving stones – A breeding ground for weeds. Sustainable control

mortarpatiopavers

I'm looking for a solution to control weed growth on a patio out of paving stone. The weeds are growing the the joints between the stones as can be seen in the picture.
Two methods have been proposed:

  1. Jointing the gaps with mortar.
  2. Remove the stones and ad a fleece under the paving stones.

Method 1. is much cheaper than method 2. So I'm inclined to use method 1.

What are the pros and cons of each method?

Are there any other alternatives which suppress weed growth sustainably and in the long term?

Patio with paving stones

Best Answer

From the picture you already have your patio installed. To implement the polymetric sand solution or the mortar solution requires that you

  1. Pull up the pavers
  2. Clean out the sand/dirt between the cracks
  3. Reinstall the pavers
  4. Apply polymetric sand/mortar

I've been working on the same issue but I am trying to not pull up the pavers.

The Problem:

  1. Dirt gets into the cracks between the pavers
  2. Seeds blow onto the patio and get into the dirt
  3. Seeds grow and send roots down between the pavers

So, polymetric sand/mortar provides less opportunity for dirt which reduces the chance for seeds to sprout.

Putting weed blocker under the patio fails to address the root cause.

My Solution

I know I'm going to catch some heat for this but here goes. I have a large paver patio and I hate pulling weeds so I decided to try salt to prevent weeds. Salt gets down into the cracks and makes an unfavorable environment for seeds to sprout.

  1. Bought a 20 pound bag of table salt for $7 (not rock salt, table salt is super ground super fine)
  2. Poured about 3 pounds of it onto the patio
  3. Used a push broom to work the salt into the cracks. Since it was table salt it is very fine and broomed into the cracks nicely.
  4. Using my water hose I wetted down the salt so that it washed into the cracks. Not a major hose down, just enough to get the salt wet and further into the cracks.

The patio looked a little salty for a few days. A rain or two brought the patio back to it's normal color.

The result

  • Weed free patio all summer
  • No salt damage to the pavers

If weeds start to grow again I'll broom in more salt. I'm one year into my experiment - so far, so good.

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