
Easy Weed Control in the Garden
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The following article is reprinted in it's entirety with permission by Michael J. McGroarty, author and webmaster for FreePlants.com.
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The following information is for general gardening purposes only. The following weed control method is for non-food garden areas only such as flower beds or landscaped areas. Enjoy!
Keeping your landscape plantings, flower beds, and nursery
crops free of weeds is a battle, but if you approach it with a strategic
plan, you will prevail. In order to develop a plan, you first must
understand how weeds work, and what kind of weeds you are dealing
with.
Basically weeds grow either from seed, or they reproduce
from their roots. As the roots grow outward from the parent plant new
plants sprout up from the lateral roots, creating more parent plants and
the process continues and the weeds thrive. Weeds that tend to reproduce
from the root are usually more difficult to control.
Weed controls facts? Weeds are plants, and they
function just like the desirable plants in your yard. They need water,
sunlight, and nutrition to survive. Of these three key survival needs, the
easiest one for a gardener to eliminate is sunlight. Through proper
mulching you can eliminate the sunlight.
But first, let’s look at the steps you should go through
before you mulch, then we’ll discuss the best mulching techniques to
use. In order for your weed control efforts to be truly effective, you
should do everything in your power to make your gardens as weed free as
possible before you plant or mulch. There are a couple of ways you can go
about this, either organically or with chemicals. I don’t like using
chemicals, but I do use them for weed control, and I use them for pest
control when necessary.
I’ll discuss organic control first. The first thing you
should do is remove all unwanted vegetation from your planting area. Using
a hoe, spade or other digging device, undercut the roots and remove the
undesirable plants, roots and all. Then you should work the soil by
rototilling or turning the soil by hand.
Once worked, let the soil sit for four days or so, and
work it again. Keep doing this over and over as long as time permits. This
process serves two purposes. It brings the roots that were left in the
soil close to the surface so they can be dried by the sun, which will make
them non viable, and it disturbs the weed seeds that have started to
germinate, which makes them non viable as well. The longer you continue
this process the more weeds you are eliminating from your garden.
Weed control facts? Depending on the time of the
year, there are a few billion weed seeds drifting through the air at any
given time, so to think that you can eventually rid a garden of weed seed
is false thinking, but at least this process is effective for the
remaining roots, which are the most difficult to control.
With that process complete, go ahead and plant your
garden. When you’re done planting you can either mulch the bed, or keep
turning the soil on a weekly basis to keep it free of weeds. Most people
opt to mulch. Not only does mulch help to control the weeds, but if you
select a natural mulch it also adds organic matter to the soil which makes
for better gardening results down the road.
Before mulching you can spread newspaper (7-9 layers
thick) over the soil and place the mulch over top of that. The newspaper
will block the sunlight from reaching the surface of the soil and help to
keep weed growth to a minimum. The newspaper will eventually decompose,
and not permanently alter the make up of your garden.
Paper grocery bags also work well, so the next time you
hear, “Paper or Plastic?”, you’ll know how to answer.
What about black plastic, or the weed barrier fabric sold
at garden centers? I don’t like either and I’ll tell you why. For one,
neither one of them ever go away, and the make up of your garden is
forever altered until you physically remove them, which is a real pain in
the butt.
Weed Control facts? Plastic is no good for the soil
because soil needs to breath. Plastic blocks the transfer of water and
oxygen, and eventually your soil will suffer as will your garden. It’s
all right to use plastic in a vegetable garden as long as you remove it at
the end of the season and give the soil a chance to breath.
Weed barrier fabrics allow the soil to breath, but what
happens is that when you mulch over top of the fabric, which you should
because the fabric is ugly, the mulch decomposes and becomes topsoil.
Weeds love topsoil, and they will grow like crazy in it. Only problem is,
they are growing on top of the fabric, and you are stuck with a ton of
problems, like a weedy garden, and a major job of trying to remove the
fabric that is now firmly anchored in place because the weeds have rooted
through it.
Weed fabric is also porous enough that if an area becomes
exposed to the sunlight, enough light will peek through and weeds below
the fabric will grow, pushing their way through the fabric. I don’t like
the stuff, I’ve removed miles of it from landscapes for other people
because it did not work as they had expected.
Weed control facts? Controlling weeds with chemicals
is fairly easy, and very effective if done properly. I know that many
people don’t approve of chemical weed controls, but millions of people
use them, so I might as well tell you how to get the most effect using
them.
There are two types of chemical weed controls,
post-emergent, and pre-emergent. In a nutshell, a post-emergent herbicide
kills weeds that are actively growing. A pre- emergent prevents weed seeds
from germinating. Of the post- emergent herbicides there are both
selective and non-selective herbicides. A selective herbicide is like the
herbicides that are in weed and feed type lawn fertilizers. The herbicide
will kill broad leaf weeds in your lawn, but it doesn’t harm the
grass.
One of the most popular non-selective herbicides is
Round-up®, it pretty much kills any plant it touches. Rule number one.
Read the labels and follow the safety precautions!!! Round-up® is very
effective if used properly, but first you must understand how it works.
Round-up® must be sprayed on the foliage of the plant, where it is
absorbed, then translocated to the root system where it then kills the
plant. It takes about 72 hours for the translocation process to completely
take place, so you don’t want to disturb the plant at all for at least
72 hours after it has been sprayed.
After 72 hours you can dig, chop, rototill, and pretty
much do as you please because the herbicide has been translocated through
out the plant. The manufacture claims that Round-up® does not have any
residual effect, which means that you can safely plant in an area where
Round-up® has been used. However, I would not use it in vegetable garden
without researching further.
No residual effect also means that Round-up® has no
effect whatsoever on weed seeds, so there is absolutely no benefit to
spraying the soil. Only spray the foliage of the weeds you want to kill.
Be careful of over spray drifting to your desirable plants. To prevent
spray drift I adjust the nozzle of my sprayer so that the spray droplets
are larger and heavier, and less likely to be carried by the wind. I also
keep the pressure in the tank lower, by only pumping the tank a minimum
number of strokes. Just enough to deliver the spray.
Buy a sprayer that you can use as a dedicated sprayer for
Round-up® only. Never use a sprayer that you have used for herbicides for
any other purpose. Once you have sprayed the weeds, waited 72 hours and
then removed them, you can go ahead and plant. Mulching is recommended as
described above. To keep weed seeds from germinating you can apply a
pre-emergent herbicide.
Depending on the brand, some of them are applied over top
of the mulch, and some are applied to the soil before the mulch is
applied. A pre-emergent herbicide creates a vapor barrier at the soil
level that stops weed seed germination, and can be very effective at
keeping your gardens weed free. They usually only last about 5 or 6 months
and need to be re-applied.
Visit a full service garden center and seek the advice of
a qualified professional to select the pre-emergent herbicide that will
best meet your needs. Never use a pre-emergent herbicide in your vegetable
garden, and be careful around areas where you intend to sow grass seed. If
you spill a little in an area where you intend to plant grass, the grass
will not grow, they really do work.
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