Tips for Controlling Weeds and Keeping Your Garden BeautifulTips for Controlling Weeds and Keeping Your Garden Beautiful
The problem with weeds is that you never know your lawn has them until there's a vigorous overgrowth that threatens your turf and your plants. Most lawn owners just don’t pay attention to an innocent, scrawny stem with tiny leaves until it turns into a monster. And when it does, that's often the time when it's next to impossible to get rid of the weed. If you want to manage and maintain your lawn, learn the effective ways of controlling weeds.
What is a weed?
Why you should control weeds
Is there any reason why I should not be so harsh on weeds?
Controlling weeds the old way
Biennial weeds are the type that survive for two years. During the last year, these weeds flower and develop seeds. Annual weeds, such as thistles, chickweed and crabgrass, maintain a yearly life cycle. Unlike perennial weeds, they are easier to control.
If you don't want to use chemicals and if the weeds in your lawn are still manageable, try to control their growth by simply uprooting the weeds. The best way to do this is to cultivate the soil by breaking up the surface. This aerates the soil and makes it soft, so weeds are easier to pull out. Do this when the weeds are still young to ensure that no flower or seed is propagated or spread. Perform this task regularly to make sure that any growth within a season is controlled.
An old garden practice called mulching is also an effective way to keep weeds under control. This process helps control weeds by using a thick layer of materials such as leaves, bark, grass clippings and other organic matter and spreading the mixture over your lawn. Not only does this organic material keep your soil rich and healthy, it also prevents sunlight from reaching the seeds of the weeds. Since they can't grow and establish so the weeds die.
If you use these natural methods of controlling weeds, you will have to be vigilant and patient. Pulling out leaves and preventing seeds from growing doesn't guarantee they won't sprout again. However, you can keep controlling them until they are either minimized or eliminated.
Using herbicides
There are two kinds of herbicides – the systemic type and the contact type. The systemic herbicide is absorbed by the weeds through the leaves and the root system. These kill the weeds from the inside out. Contact herbicides, as their name implies, kill from the outside in. They prevent the weeds from using photosynthesis to survive.
Both these herbicides come as either selective or nonselective varieties. Selective herbicides are those that are chemically capable of killing only certain weeds without affecting other plants in your lawn. Nonselectives, however, will kill regardless of what they come in contact with.
The best way to use these chemicals for controlling weeds is to follow the manufacturer's directions. This is also the safest method, considering that much of the failure (and danger) associated with the use of herbicides is due to inaccurate or incorrect application. Use during early spring in order to attack weeds when they are at their weakest.
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