Tag Archives: weeds

Weeds – some ideas on how to wage war

First published by Rattan Direct on 19 September 2016.

It’s not easy to get rid of determined weeds. Before you pick up a spray (dangerous and not always effective) try some other methods. Read on and good luck!

Weeds can be so annoying

There are a handful of weeds in the average garden that really annoy. Everyone has their own favourites (not!) but it often comes down to the usual suspects.

In my personal top ten I include the dandelion. Everyone knows it, with its cheerful yellow face and clocks of seeds to tell the time by (one o’clock, two o’clock …) and that then blow away in the wind to grow somewhere else.

Dandelion seeds blowing away in the wind. Weeds
Dandelion seeds blowing away in the wind

I also include oxalis – the very annoying one with a yellow (sometimes pink) flower and which can infest pots and containers. And shepherd’s purse, willowherb, Welsh poppy, possibly sweetheart/goosegrass/ cleavers. Definitely couch grass. Oh, don’t get me started!

Oxalis corniculata. Weeds
Oxalis corniculata
©TeunSpaans and licensed for re-use under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported licence

A word in your ear before you start

A range of approaches works best in getting rid of weeds but whatever you decide to do, you’ll have to do it time and again. Unfortunately, this isn’t a one-off job.

The Royal Horticultural Society has battled weeds since 1804 – so they know a thing or two. Here is their advice.

Six good ways of removing weeds

Weedkillers or herbicides are extremely strong substances. Yes, they kill unwanted plants but they can also damage the very garden plants you love and want to keep. And they can damage and be extremely dangerous to humans and animals.

Try other approaches first.

  1. Keep on top of weeds by hoeing and hand weeding. If you’re keen on gardening kit, you can buy special tools to get rid of daisies and dandelions.
  2. Don’t let weeds flower.
  3. Go for physical attrition: regular slashing of couch grass with a sharp knife, for example, weakens and loosens the plant in the soil.
  4. Use a flame gun on paving slabs and driveways when the foliage is dry and make sure you allow sufficient burn-time to kill deep-rooted weeds, such as dandelions. Obviously, move the rattan furniture first!
  5. Use barriers such as mulch or edging.
  6. Use weed-suppressant fabrics over recently cleared soil to prevent the old weeds from growing again and new weeds from becoming established.

Spray a herbicide if you must

If you’re going to use a herbicide, don’t use glyphosate. For other herbicides, you’re just in time to use it. In mid to late summer weeds have a large surface area which will absorb the herbicide – and these leaves are still around in early autumn. Choose your poison, read and follow the directions on the label, and take great care.

  1. Hot water is useful for spot treatment (watch out for neighbouring plants, of course). Australian research shows that it’s as effective at weed control as glyphosate.
  2. Sprays based on acetic acid (much stronger than the vinegar you and I put on fish and chips). These weedkillers are non-selective and biodegradable. Weedol Fast Acting Weedkiller and Headland New-Way Weed Spray contain acetic acid.
  3. Sprays containing pelargonic acid, a substance that occurs naturally in pelargoniums, apples and grapes. It’s non-toxic and breaks down readily in the soil. Neudorff Superfast & Long Lasting Weedkiller contains pelargonic acid.
  4. Herbicides using fatty acids which disrupt the plant’s cellular structure, causing them to become dehydrated and die. It’s good at eradicating annual weeds and can be used around vegetables. Bayer’s Natria Super Fast Weedkiller contains fatty acids.

Good luck!

Weeding needn’t be annoying. I use it as a way to destress …

Dandelion clocks at Inverboyndie. Weeds
Dandelion clocks at Inverboyndie, near Auds, Aberdeenshire
© Copyright Walter Baxter and licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic Licence

 

 

 

Weedkillers – beyond glyphosate-based herbicides

First published by Rattan Direct on 1 July 2016.

Despite our fine words about weeds and wild flowers, there are some plants that are downright annoying. Couch grass and other grasses are my personal bugbears at the moment: on the path and in the flower bed, between the vegetables, creeping along through the fruit. I’m not over the moon about dandelions either. And I’m starting to feel a bit cross in the direction of the Welsh poppy.

Welsh Poppies, Baltasound, Shetland. A garden plant which freely naturalises. Glyphosate
Welsh Poppies, Baltasound, Shetland. A garden plant which freely naturalises. ©Mike Pennington and licensed for re-use under Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic Creative Commons licence.

We all have our own (un)favourite plants that can turn into out-and-out enemies if we’re not careful. You may recognise one or two of yours in rogues’ galleries like this one from the Royal Horticultural Society.

But we don’t want stress levels rising when we’re relaxing at the garden table or on the sun lounger. Are herbicides the answer?

Let’s just use the spray!

Hang on a moment! Herbicides or weedkillers are extremely strong substances. Yes, they kill unwanted plants but they can also damage the very garden plants you love and want to keep. And they can damage and be extremely dangerous to humans and animals.

There’s been increasing concern about the chemical glyphosate in recent months as the World Health Organization and the European Parliament have been investigating how long it hangs around, its unwanted presence in food and its potential to cause cancer and adversely affect the liver and kidneys.

Glyphosate (also known as glycophosphate) is the most widely used herbicide in the world and is very good at eradicating deep-rooted perennial weeds. You might know it as Roundup or Tumbleweed. The danger to humans may mean the withdrawal of glyphosate-based weedkillers from home gardeners in the UK, and being banned from use in public open spaces. A final decision will be taken this summer.

Herbicides at a garden centre. Glyphosate
Herbicides at a garden centre. Sarah Buchanan

If glyphosate is out, what are the alternatives?

  • Hot water is useful for spot treatment (watch out for neighbouring plants, of course). Australian research shows that it’s as effective at weed control as glyphosate.
  • Sprays based on acetic acid (much stronger than the vinegar you and I put on fish and chips). These weedkillers are non-selective and biodegradable. Weedol Fast Acting Weedkiller and Headland New-Way Weed Spray contain acetic acid.
  • Sprays containing pelargonic acid, a substance that occurs naturally in pelargoniums, apples and grapes. It’s non-toxic and breaks down readily in the soil. Neudorff Superfast & Long Lasting Weedkiller contains pelargonic acid.
  • Herbicides using fatty acids which disrupt the plant’s cellular structure, causing them to become dehydrated and die. It’s good at eradicating annual weeds and can be used around vegetables. Bayer’s Natria Super Fast Weedkiller contains fatty acids.

If you’re going to use a herbicide, now is the time to do it. In mid to late summer weeds have a large surface area to take it in. Choose your poison, read and follow the directions on the label, and take great care.

Other methods of weed control

Keep on top of weeds by hoeing and hand weeding. Don’t let them flower. Go for physical attrition: regular slashing of couch grass with a sharp knife, for example, weakens and loosens the plant in the soil. Use a flame gun on paving slabs and driveways when the foliage is dry and make sure you allow sufficient burn-time to kill deep-rooted weeds, such as dandelions.

Dandelions grow anywhere. Glyphosate
Dandelions grow anywhere © Christine Westerback and licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic licence.

Use barriers such as mulch or edging.

Use weed-suppressant fabrics over recently cleared soil to prevent the old weeds from growing again and new weeds from becoming established.

Lather, rinse and repeat

Unfortunately, this isn’t a one-off job. A range of approaches works best but whatever you decide to do, you’ll have to do it time and again.