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pixi 13-12-2004 01:23 PM

Chickweed Killer
 
The ground in my woods is literally covered with chickweed. Part of the
woods is landscaped.

Any suggestions as to how to get rid of it? Can one spray now? I am in
zone 5. Supposed to get close to zero tonight.
Or can I sprinkle a dust around now.


My thinking is that the chickweed is actively growing. Not much else is.
And I need to get rid of it before it takes over the whole place.

Thank you.

Pixi




SugarChile 13-12-2004 01:50 PM

Chickweed is what I consider a "winter weed". It grows actively this time
of year and into early spring, then it sets seed (abundantly) and dies out,
for the most part. I've never used chemicals on it, but it is very quick
and easy to pull.

I pull it in flower beds and other places where it is obvious, then don't
spend much time worrying about it. I figure, like the poor, it will always
be with us.

Cheers,
Sue

--

Zone 6, South-central PA

"pixi" wrote in message
...
The ground in my woods is literally covered with chickweed. Part of the
woods is landscaped.

Any suggestions as to how to get rid of it? Can one spray now? I am in
zone 5. Supposed to get close to zero tonight.
Or can I sprinkle a dust around now.


My thinking is that the chickweed is actively growing. Not much else is.
And I need to get rid of it before it takes over the whole place.

Thank you.

Pixi






[email protected] 14-12-2004 02:02 PM

Where I have chickweed - I pull it out and lime the area. That is the
best way to slow it down. When it starts growing again you will know
your soil needs some more lime. Works for me.
Susie :-))


pixi 14-12-2004 02:19 PM

Have at least an acre of chickweed so pulling it out is not an option. It
is in the woods so I can not use mechanical means to get rid of it.
Wonder if I could lime it when it is dormant.


wrote in message
ups.com...
Where I have chickweed - I pull it out and lime the area. That is the
best way to slow it down. When it starts growing again you will know
your soil needs some more lime. Works for me.
Susie :-))





[email protected] 15-12-2004 11:59 AM

In my files I have some items regarding chickweed from various persons
that may be of interest to you:
Chickweed is one of my favorite wild vegetables. It has a mild flavor
and the whole plant is edible and highly nutritious. It contains enough
Vitamin C to be considered antiscorbutic (treats scurvy), and is also
high in the B vitamins, iron, and the somewhat rare trace mineral
copper.
You can harvest it by cutting or pulling at ground level. If you want
it to grow back, though, pinch off the tops only. The stems are as good
as the leaves. You can also eat the flowers and seedpods. Like I said
earlier, the whole plant. Eat it raw in salads -- my favorite salad is
chickweed and watercress -- or cook it for 2-5 minutes. It cooks almost
instantly. Euell Gibbons (in Stalking the Healthful Herbs) tells about
a very healthy family he knows that eats chickweed every day. They eat
it raw in salds and make it into a "Green Drink" by mixing it in a
blender with water and whatever other greens are available. You can
cook it into quiche (cook first, then drain thoroughly, even rolling it
between two paper towels to get out as much liquid as possible). Throw
it into chicken broth instead of or in addition to noodles or rice.
It's available year roud hereabouts, and can be found growing under the
snow.
Medicinally, it is diuretic (mildly) and some people swear it speeds up
the metabolism if eaten daily and will help in weight loss. I tried it
and it didn't work for me, but trying it will do no harm. Externally,
it is used in poultices and ointments. Some experts claim it to have
mild antibiotic properties.
Latin name: Stellaria media, member of the Pink Family, related to
carnations. --Deborah Duchon
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chick weed Stellaria media, also known as star weed or herbal slim.
This contains saponins which have anti-inflammatory effects similar to
cortisone according to many herbalists, but is much milder and without
side effects. It is used to treat skin irritations and rashes. Some use
it for Eczema
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
regarding Chickweed for eczema:
Chickweed oil/salve sometimes seems to exacerbate both the itchiness
and the extent of rashes on me, no matter what the cause--bug bites,
food reaction, my keratosis pilaris--so I know it's not just fungi
eating the oil. These days I keep the chickweed for the itch of
almost-peelable scabs. -- Persi M.
---leo/lee



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