I'm just beginning to clear our new plot. I've cut down and dug up an enormous amount of weeds. I'm unsure what to do with them, I don't have the vehicle or the inclination to take them to the tip, and I'm assuming I shouldn't compost? My thinking is to just heap them into a pile and have a bonfire when the site allows during the winter. Any suggestions?
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostDepends on what weeds they are! I'd compost anything without roots or seeds.
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Grab a bin with a tight fittings lid, pack it tight with weeds, put a couple of bricks on to weight them down, top up with water, put the lid on amd leave it to rot down.
It'll smell so keep the lid on it. After a month or two ad a little of the liquor to your watering can amd feed back all those nutrients back to your crops.
The icky gunk at the bottom of the bucket can be thrown on the compost.
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The bane of my life at the moment is Sow Thistle!!!! At first I was pulling it up, leaving it to dry out on the path then chucking it on the compost heap but the blasted stuff has started to grow again!!!!! So now it gets put in a black bag (along with the occasional bit of bindweed and ground elder from next door's plot!) and taken to the skip!
The other two weeds I have a lot of (well, the minute I turn my back they multiply like crazy) are chickweed and broad-leaved willowherb These two don't seem too bad on the compost heap.If I'm not on the Grapevine I can usually be found here!....https://www.thecomfreypatch.co.uk/
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Originally posted by jubilado View PostI shouldn't compost? ... have a bonfire ?
the nasty perennials need killing first though: roast them on a hot path/roof until brown & crispy. Bonfires are fun, but antisocial and pollutingAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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Originally posted by Gillykat View PostSow Thistle!... the blasted stuff has started to grow again!
It's not a difficult weed, they are pretty easy to pull out just as they go into flower. If you leave them on the soil as a mulch, they'll help to prevent other weeds coming through.
btw, guinea pigs love themAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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