Author Topic: How do you guys keep the weeds down in your garden?  (Read 2122 times)

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Offline docmagnum357

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Re: How do you guys keep the weeds down in your garden?
« Reply #30 on: November 02, 2009, 04:00:09 PM »
We used to use Iron oxide.  we applyed it with a wooden aplicator about five feet long.... some people calle it a hoe.  Now, my wife and i use a lot of mulch.  Some parts of the garden are not as good of soil as others, and they get wood mulch.  it builds the soil as it decomposes, but uses nitrogen in the process.  Have to add a little nitrogen there.  some parts the composition and ph and tilth are what we have been working for, and we use newspaper, and wheat straw, although it has gotten expensive.  grass clippings are o.k., but they also use a little nitrogen.
Always think"Am I building the soil, or depleting it?"  And not just in terms of npk, or even micro nutrients, but in terms of tilth, bioactivity(worms are a real weathervane for the health of your soil) and friability.  We started with red clay here, and still have parts or the garden that need sand.  They get tthe heavy, wood or bark mulch.  The deeper you can get the topsoil, the better it is, too.  Mulch is a real help with all this.  So are green manures, like buck wheat, but that is lesson two.

Offline charles p

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Re: How do you guys keep the weeds down in your garden?
« Reply #31 on: November 03, 2009, 05:42:28 AM »
There are chemicals that will knock out the crabgrass but they work by keeping it from germinating in the spring.  Probably best to apply about 6 weeks before your last expected frost and then again about two weeks before your last frost.  I once used  Balan in my yard.  It is marketed for use on soybeans.  It worked well but you can not seed anything that spring.

If you put a pre-emergent in your garden, you will have to start your seeds indoors and then transplant them into your garden.

Another common grass is nutsedge.  There are chemicals for it also.  You have to know if you have yellow or purple nutsedge.  I have purple.

Contact your county extension agent for advice.