I love convolvulus so I am voting couch grass/twitch first, closely followed by dandelions. Although biodynamic gardening uses a preparation containing yarrow, stinging nettle, chamomile, oak bark and dandelion. Interesting as I have quite a few.
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New Poll! What is your worst weed?
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Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better...Albert Einstein
Blog - @Twotheridge: For The Record - Sowing and Growing with a Virgin Veg Grower: Spring Has Now Sprung...Boing! http://vvgsowingandgrowing2012.blogs....html?spref=tw
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Couch grass, no matter how many years you mulch to suppress weeds this plant is phenomenon, it will stay underneath for yonks just waiting for the right conditions. As I always followed permaculture methods (I am not a hippy but some of their points make sense) I never pull the weeds but simply howe them when and where, the random loopy block from RC had a good point about leaving the roots to decompose. After three long years of doing exactly that I have hardly any weeds.
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Originally posted by CimaDirapa View PostAs I always followed permaculture methods (I am not a hippy but some of their points make sense) I never pull the weeds but simply howe them when and where, the random loopy block from RC had a good point about leaving the roots to decompose. After three long years of doing exactly that I have hardly any weeds.Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better...Albert Einstein
Blog - @Twotheridge: For The Record - Sowing and Growing with a Virgin Veg Grower: Spring Has Now Sprung...Boing! http://vvgsowingandgrowing2012.blogs....html?spref=tw
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Bindweed is Public Enemy Number One with me, it gets everywhere. I grow a lot of soft fruit and with the warm starts to the year we seem to have, the bindweed gets a good hold before the poor old fruit gets going. I have to spend too much precious time fighting this wretched weed, it's like fighting a forest fire, just when you think you've won, it comes up somewhere else!
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Originally posted by rinabean View PostSnowberries. I've seen them described as a good plant for beginners as they grow "reasonably quickly".... It will happily grow through 2 feet of added soil even after being horribly mutilated. I wish I could eat the snowberries, just to spite them, but unfortunately they are poisonous to humans.
But I'll let you know a little secret - a Sheen flame gun really knocks 'em back on their heels. Never had any more problems after an afternoon of scorch and burn...There's no point reading history if you don't use the lessons it teaches.
Head-hunted member of the Nutter's Club - can I get my cranium back please ?
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Can't believe I'm the fist to mention thistles. They're the only ones that cause me true misery. Hoe them and they split and become many, too deep to pull, leave an odd hoed leaf and it turns to a brittle viscious piece of nastiness. Not notice one and bend down to weed something else and get a nasty surprise on your rear.
They're almost as close to evil as wasps!the fates lead him who will;him who won't they drag.
Happiness is not having what you want,but wanting what you have.xx
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All that said, I do love it when a load appear on a fairly recent yet still empty bed, the satisfaction of loosening the soil and pulling the whole thing out is only comparable to couch grass roots.the fates lead him who will;him who won't they drag.
Happiness is not having what you want,but wanting what you have.xx
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gotta be the horsetail most of the others are easy if you don't mind using glyphosate,you can even provide canes for bindweed to grow up so its easy to spray and the annuals succumb to the old flame gun,but nothing touches horsetail. I hoe it ,pull it up cover with black plastic for a year,tried digging it out (gave up 2 ft down),flame gunned it ,mulched with a foot of straw,and finally jumped up and down on it o provide a breach and gave it the old sticky agent orange (double strength glyphosate mixed in with non fungicidal wallpaper paste to make it stick)
looked this weekend and its back growing like a saturn five rocket on launch ,even on the patch where I had a very large and very hot fire.don't be afraid to innovate and try new things
remember.........only the dead fish go with the flow
Another certified member of the Nutters club
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Originally posted by Peppermint View PostWe only moved here the middle of last year so we haven't had a full season to assess the full round but so far the problem weeds are:
Ground elder - it's strangling borders, under some of the trees and is moving into grass areas
Couch grass - we are digging it up in all the vegetable beds
Docks - these have self seeded everywhere
Celendine - it's spread across the lawn and borders
I've voted for creeping buttercup as it is everywhere and the field next to us is full of it, but ground elder is turning out to be the bigger problem.
I also have creeping buttercups but I like them, there aren't many wildflowers in my newly seeded lawn, so I let it spread in a few areas which I don't work. Wild Geraniums grow in the grass too, ad lovely daisies of course. The first year that I seeded the lawn it was overrun by all sorts of weeds - mostly knapweeds and dandelion, so I pulled most out by the roots and they haven't returned in significant numbers yet.
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