Green Thumb Article Logo
[Valid RSS feed]
Email:    Pass:   
 
Members
   
select
Login
select
Submit Articles
select
Submission Guidelines
select
Benefits
select
Earn Money
   
Publishers
   
select
Benefits for Publishers
select
Terms of Service
select
RSS Feeds
 
Categories

Annuals (24)
Beneficial Insects (9)
Biodynamic Gardening (3)
Biointensive Gardening (2)
Botanical Gardens (4)
Bulbs (corms, tubors, rh (15)
Community Food Bank (1)
Community Gardens (2)
Companion Planting (5)
Composting (11)
Container Gardening (22)
Diaganosing Plant Proble (10)
Edible Flowers (8)
Fall Gardening (19)
Flower Gardens (70)
Fruit Trees (25)
Gardening Books (6)
Gardening Equipment (1)
Gardening for Beginners (94)
Gardening For Profit (10)
Gardening Humor (20)
Gardening Tools (9)
Gardening Zones (6)
Greenhouses (8)
Growing Sprouts (1)
Health and Nutrition (96)
Herb Gardens (61)
Horticulture (47)
Hydroponic Gardening (3)
Indoor Gardening (10)
Landscape Gardening (80)
Mulch (6)
Non-Profit Organizations (4)
Perennials (40)
Permaculture (2)
Pest and Disease (25)
Plant and Tree Identific (5)
Plant Propagation (6)
Prunning (14)
Raised Bed Gardening (3)
School Gardens (8)
Seeds (14)
Soil and Fertilizer Mana (20)
Spring Gardening (13)
Square Foot Gardening (1)
Succulent Plants (3)
Transplanting (1)
Trees and Shrubs (94)
Urban Gardening (1)
Vegetable Gardening (49)
Water Gardening (2)
Water Management (18)
Weed Management (22)
Winter Gardening (7)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 1043
Total Authors: 90
Total Downloads: 148396


Newest Member
bob cashdollar
 
Endorsements
 
Arbico-Organics

Weed Free Gardening

   (Read 50+ times)
By Catherine Smith

Weed free gardening, every gardener's dream! Unfortunately, that's not how it works in real life, but here are some tips on how to keep your day of pulling weeds to a minimum.

The trick is to understand the weeds life cycle and interrupt it as often as possible. And as an organic gardener I don't use herbicides to do it.

I use newspapers, cardboard and mulch. I know if I lay down several layers of wet newspaper (black and white only, please discard the colored advertisements), non-waxed wet cardboard I'm going to smother most weeds by depriving them of sunlight. I also use the lasagna method of layering newspaper or cardboard, veggie peelings, spent coffee grounds and any other natural material on the bed, I will draw in the earthworms in profusion. They love newspaper, cardboard and coffee grounds. For them it's a buffet. And where you have earthworms you have rich, aerated soil. The worms burrow around leaving their castings and making additional holes for air and water to penetrate deep into your soil, making it richer and healthier.

The richer you soil is in organic matter the easier it is to remove any weeds you may have missed, because the ground is soft and easy to work with. The weeds pull out much more easily.

This is not particularly difficult to understand or to make work for you. You are always going to have some weeds, especially some of the grasses, my personal enemy happens to be quack grass. But if you are persistent and keep at it, eventually the weed cannot get enough light, air or moisture to grow nor produce more weed seeds. You are always going to have some weeds, do to helpful visits from birds, and insects, but you can make your life much easier, just by a bit of planning, using materials that normally are almost free and sticking with it.

Author Bio Box: Catherine Smith

Please visit my site at: http://www.helium.com
Article From GreenThumbArticles.com - Organic Gardening Articles
Submitted on: 2008-04-13 17:00:07
Number Times Read: 79
Word Count: 413
Search by keyword tag ► weed free mulches lasagna gardening
Didn't really find what you were looking for?

 
Endorsements
 
Related Articles

HTML Ready Article

Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard to use on your websites, blogs, ezines and newsletters.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual