A combination of the right tools, a little elbow grease and some good old ingenuity will usually do the trick to treat weeds. Here are seven basics of weed control that work well.
June 19, 2015
A combination of the right tools, a little elbow grease and some good old ingenuity will usually do the trick to treat weeds. Here are seven basics of weed control that work well.
A weed is any plant — even an ornamental — that grows where you don't want it.
If you have weeds, don't automatically reach for the sprayer to treat those on the lawn and in the garden.
Weeds can be annual, biennial or perennial.
So what is the best strategy to controlling weeds?
Weed seeds need light to germinate. Keep the soil around your plants covered with organic mulch, black plastic, layers of wet newspaper or fabric weed barrier to prevent weeds from taking hold in the soil.
Use edging materials like bricks or underground barriers of metal or plastic around garden beds to keep lawn grass and perennial weeds from creeping into flower beds and vegetable plots.
Solarizing the soil means letting the sun do the weeding for you.
Don't dig the solarized plot before planting, because cultivating will bring buried weed seeds to the surface.
Cultivate your garden in the fall by working in plenty of compost.
If you're planning a new flower bed, instead of digging out weeds and grass, smother them to death with a piece of old carpeting.
You can toss weeds into the compost pile if they're young and haven't yet bloomed, because they have no seeds that will come back to haunt you next year.
To kill weed seeds, compost needs to heat up to 71°C (170°F) and few heaps ever get that hot.
Don't let soil remain bare for any length of time, or weeds will move right in — they think that's their job.
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