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Dandy's Topsoil

Dandy's Composted Mulch Bark Fines | Clay Soil Improver

Properly composted bark fines by Dandy's - a cross between a mulch and a compost, brilliant for clay soils

£171.60£220.45

The unsung workhorse of British soil improvement - composted bark fines that lighten heavy clay, improve drainage, hold moisture, and gradually transform sad soil into proper garden ground. By Dandy's; available in 7 sizes.

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Key features

  • A cross between a mulch and a compost - light, friable, nutrient-packed
  • Brilliant for lightening heavy clay soils
  • Improves drainage on heavy soils, retains moisture on sandy ones
  • Long-lasting organic matter - bark breaks down slowly over multiple seasons
  • Works as soil improver, mulch, or container top-dressing
  • By Dandy's, peat-free long before the law required it
Material Properly composted bark fines (well-screened, friable)
Weight Bulk bags are heavy - Jumbo approximately 500-700kg
Coverage Variant-dependent: 250L to 2000L As a mulch: 1000L covers approximately 14 sqm at 7cm depth, or 20 sqm at 5cm depth
Origin British supplier (Dandy's Topsoil, Wales)
Trusted UK retailer Norfolk family farm

About this product

Full description

If you've used our Dandy's seasonal compost mixes, you'll have already met this ingredient working quietly behind the scenes — bark fines is the textured component that gives SpringMix, SummerMix and WinterMix their structure, holds them together as a mulch through British rain, and slowly breaks down into long-term organic matter in your soil. Bought standalone, composted mulch bark fines is one of the most versatile single-ingredient soil improvers you can have on the pile: a cross between a mulch and a compost, properly light, properly nutrient-packed, and brilliant at the specific job most British borders need most.

From Dandy's Topsoil, our trusted bulk-supply partners — specialists in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates. Available in seven sizes from small handy bags right through to a full cubic-metre jumbo.

What it actually is

Composted mulch bark fines is properly composted bark — not raw chip mulch, not fresh wood material, but well-broken-down bark that's been through the composting process long enough to be ready to release its nutrients gently into the soil. The "fines" describes the texture: small, fine, easy to handle, easy to incorporate. Properly described as a cross between a mulch and a compost — coarser and more textured than a screened compost, lighter and more friable than a wood chip mulch. The middle ground between them.

Why it works so well in British borders

This is one of those quietly excellent materials that solves several common British garden problems at once:

  • Lightens heavy clay — clay soils are the genuine challenge of most British gardens; they hold water, compact in winter, crack in summer, and resist root development. A generous incorporation of composted bark fines is one of the genuine fixes. The fines open up the structure, improve drainage, and gradually transform the soil over a few seasons
  • Improves drainage on heavy soils — the textured matter creates air pockets and channels that water can move through, reducing waterlogging that causes root rot
  • Holds moisture on lighter soils — counterintuitively, the same material that improves drainage on clay also improves water retention on sandy soils. Organic matter is the universal soil amendment
  • Long-term organic matter — bark breaks down more slowly than fast composts; a single application provides soil-building benefit over multiple seasons rather than disappearing in months
  • Nutrient-rich without being heavy — properly composted bark releases nitrogen, carbon and trace elements gradually as it breaks down
  • Acts as a mulch — spread on the surface, the fines suppress weeds, retain moisture, insulate roots, and gradually self-incorporate through worm activity

What it's for

  • Improving sad, tired soil — the headline use. Mix generously into existing topsoil to lift its structure, drainage and organic content
  • Lightening heavy clay borders — spread thickly and dig in (or let the worms do it for you in a no-dig approach) to gradually transform impossible clay into workable garden soil
  • Winter mulching for borders and beds — spread 5–10cm thick over existing borders in autumn or early winter, ready for the growing season to come; suppresses weeds and prepares soil over the cold months
  • Preparing new vegetable beds — properly worked into the topsoil of new veg beds for the season ahead
  • Pot top-dressing — a thin layer of bark fines over the surface of large containers retains moisture and looks more considered than bare compost
  • Path-side mulching — the texture holds together against foot traffic and weather rather than washing away
  • Around shrubs and small trees — an annual ring of bark fines around the base (kept clear of the trunk) feeds the tree, suppresses weeds and keeps roots cool

Bark fines vs the seasonal mixes

If you've been using our Dandy's seasonal compost mixes, you might wonder whether you need this standalone product too. The honest answer: it depends what you're doing.

  • SpringMix / SummerMix / AutumnMix / WinterMix — pre-balanced multi-ingredient blends, designed for general border and planting use. Bark fines is one component, balanced with mushroom compost, organic compost, sand and (in AutumnMix) slow-release feed. The seasonal mixes are the "ready meal" of mulches
  • Composted Mulch Bark Fines (this) — the single ingredient, sold standalone. The "raw ingredient" option for gardeners who want maximum drainage improvement (more textured than a balanced compost), or who want to mix their own custom blends, or who specifically need more bark and less compost than the seasonal mixes provide

For most general garden work, the seasonal mixes will do the job. Bark fines is the right choice when you specifically want the textured component, when you're working on serious clay-soil improvement projects, or when you want the longer-lasting mulching effect that pure bark gives.

Choosing your bag size

Available in seven sizes:

  • Jumbo Bulk Bag — approximately 1000 litres (one cubic metre)
  • Standard Bulk Bag — approximately 750 litres — the size most builders' merchants use
  • Midi Bulk Bag — approximately 500 litres
  • 40 × 50-litre Handy Bags — 2000 litres — the largest handy-bag option, and the best per-litre value in the range
  • 20 × 50-litre Handy Bags — 1000 litres in handy bags
  • 10 × 50-litre Handy Bags — 500 litres
  • 5 × 50-litre Handy Bags — 250 litres — for a single project or a few raised beds

Note that the handy bags for this product are 50-litre sealed bags — larger than the 25-litre bags supplied with the seasonal compost mixes. Still carryable by hand, just twice the volume per bag. The bulk bags are properly the best value if you have space for a pallet drop-off. The handy bags are the answer if you have access difficulties — narrow path, steps, an upstairs flat — since each 50-litre bag can still be carried one at a time.

About Dandy's

Dandy's are our trusted bulk-supply partners — a long-established Welsh family business specialising in topsoils, mulches, composts and garden aggregates, supplied direct in bulk and handy bags. We stock their range because they do the unglamorous bulk products properly: well-screened materials, honest descriptions, sensible bag sizes for both serious gardeners and small projects. And because they made the move to 100% peat-free composts long before the law required it.

A small thought: the gardeners who quietly produce the best borders aren't necessarily the ones with the most knowledge or the prettiest tools. They're the ones who consistently feed their soil with proper organic matter, year on year, decade on decade. Composted bark fines is one of the quiet workhorses of that approach — the unfashionable, unflashy material that turns sad clay into proper garden soil over time. Worth getting to know.

What's included
Variant-dependent - 250L to 2000L of Dandy's composted bark fines in bulk
bag or 50L sealed handy bag format.
Care and use
- Store dry if not used immediately - cover bulk bags with a tarpaulin
- For soil improvement: mix generously into existing topsoil
- For mulching: spread 5-10cm thick over existing borders
- Can be applied year-round; autumn/winter applications give best results
- Top up annually for ongoing benefit