Wednesday, May 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Gardening: How to reach a truce in the war with weeds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2020 07:36 PM
  • Gardening: How to reach a truce in the war with weeds

If you want to avoid chemical weedkillers but don't like the idea of hand hoeing or bouncing along behind a rototiller, you still have options to keep weeds from taking over your garden.

MULCH

For starters, there's mulches, which can smother weeds. Pile organic mulches such as leaves, grass clippings, or wood chips a few inches deep over the ground to slow evaporation of water from the soil and keep it cooler. Be careful not to pile mulches right up against young plants or their stems might rot.

Organic mulches decompose over time so need regular replenishment. That’s not a bad thing, because their decomposition feeds beneficial soil microorganisms and releases nutrients for plant use. These mulches also enrich the soil with humus, which helps keep soils moist and well aerated.

Synthetic mulches are another way to quell weeds. Black plastic is the most common. It’s easy to lay down, effectively suppresses weeds, and hastens warming of the soil in spring. Recent experiments with other colored plastic films have shown effects on both pests and plant growth. A reflective plastic mulch, for example, keeps aphids at bay.

A big disadvantage of plastics is that they break apart over time, so eventually need to be disposed of. Plastic mulch also can cause problems due to poor soil aeration, and it adds nothing to the soil as far as nutrients or humus or stimulating beneficial microorganisms.

A mulch that combines some of the benefits of both plastics and organic materials is paper. Use recycled paper manufactured specifically as mulch, any plain paper such as newspaper (black and white pages only) or building paper (such as Gray Rosin Paper). Paper mulches are easy to lay down and eventually decompose, so they don’t cause a disposal problem. Paper adds little to the soil, however, in terms of humus or nutrients.

WEEDING GEESE

Looking for something offbeat in weed control? If your garden is large and your weeds are mostly grasses, consider geese.

Young geese will eat their weight in weeds every day. All you need to provide is water, shade, and some supplemental feed, as well as fencing to keep the geese in and predators out.

A couple of geese will patrol up to about an acre, and keep each other company. One caution: Don’t forget that corn is a grass. Plant corn and they’ll eat that too.

INDIRECT WEED CONTROL

Besides direct attacks on weeds, consider how your gardening practices indirectly influence weed growth in your garden.

Close spacing of plants, for example, shades the ground so lessens weed growth.

How you water also has an effect. When you use a sprinkler, you blanket your whole garden with moisture, including paths and spaces between large plants. Weeds sprout in those bare spaces opportunistically, gulp up that extra water and thrive. Drip irrigation, on the other hand, pinpoints the water supply right to the roots of your cultivated plants.

Whether or not you till your soil also influences weed growth. Lying dormant in every soil are millions of weed seeds just waiting to be awakened by light and air. Although hand digging, rototilling and plowing bury existing growth, these practices also inadvertently “sow” new weeds as seeds are brought to the surface.

If you do not till, you can avoid potential problems with soil compaction by laying out your garden in permanent beds on which you never step, roll your wheelbarrow or drive machinery. Just lay any compost or fertilizer right on top of the ground.

Using any or all of the techniques mentioned will not permanently eradicate weeds. Your goal, rather, is to keep weeds in check. You are looking for a truce -- one that requires constant attention rather than massive effort.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Trudeau promises $130M in COVID-19 aid for vulnerable northern communities

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government will spend $130 million to help northern communities maintain supply chains and shore up health and social service systems to withstand the COVID-19 pandemic. Northern communities are considered the most vulnerable if COVID-19 begins to spread because of their remoteness.

Trudeau promises $130M in COVID-19 aid for vulnerable northern communities

More elderly die as Canada's COVID-19 toll passes 800; economy could shrink 6.2%

In all, Canada was closing in on 26,000 confirmed and presumptive cases of coronavirus disease, more than 800 of them fatal. The virus has hit older people disproportionately hard, with more than 90 per cent of the deaths among those 60 and above. But the pandemic has been especially brutal to the frail elderly.Dr. Theresa Tam, the country's chief public health officer, said outbreaks in long-term care homes were the most pressing epidemic problem.

More elderly die as Canada's COVID-19 toll passes 800; economy could shrink 6.2%

Heart woes spur partial stop of malaria drug study for virus

Scientists in Brazil have stopped part of a study of the malaria drug touted as a possible coronavirus treatment after heart rhythm problems developed in one-quarter of people given the higher of two doses being tested. Chloroquine and a similar drug, hydroxychloroquine, have been pushed by President Donald Trump after some early tests suggested the drugs might curb coronavirus entering cells.

Heart woes spur partial stop of malaria drug study for virus

A look at COVID-19 in depth for Canada and around the world

COVID-19 measures and a rush on wills as well as globally how countries are tackling the CoronaVirus. 

A look at COVID-19 in depth for Canada and around the world

Busy weekend for small wildfires in B.C.

The BC Wildfire Service lists the fire danger rating across most of the province as low to moderate but firefighters in several regions still had a busy Easter weekend.The wildfire service website shows crews responded to 11 blazes between Good Friday and Easter Sunday.

Busy weekend for small wildfires in B.C.

Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The Lion of Punjab

Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The Lion of Punjab
He unified the warring chiefdoms of the Punjab into a powerful northern Empire of the Sikhs stretching to the borders of Afghanistan and Tibet

Maharaja Ranjit Singh: The Lion of Punjab