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#1
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Weeds
I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it
does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? -- Roy Bailey West Berkshire. |
#2
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Weeds
In article , Roy Bailey
writes I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? After you have strimmed off the greater part of top growth, go over the area with a mower set at its highest cut. Pick up all the surplus herbage for composting, or whatever. (Or you could mulch it round the fruit trees, they would love that) A couple of weeks later, mow it again with the cut set just a little lower. Collect up the cuttings again. Keep doing that until the patch is at the height you want it to be in the longer term. Continue mowing regularly at the chosen height, sometimes letting the cuttings fall back to feed the grassed area. That treatment will eliminate most non-grass plants other than some pretty daisies, buttercups, clovers etc. and occasional mosses. It will also give finer grasses a chance to grow and establish while the coarser slower growing types are recovering. From then, you will be able to choose a grass management plan to suit your own requirements. Greater and Lesser Burdocks - Arctium lappa and A.minus are biennials. -- Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs. |
#3
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Weeds
Roy Bailey wrote:
I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? Good Heavens, man. Have you no soul. These are wild flowers you are speaking of. Treasure your natural habitat. Have it cited as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Encourage your neighbours to visit and sample its delights .............. after the fruit picking. -- ned |
#4
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Weeds
In article , ned
writes Roy Bailey wrote: I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? Good Heavens, man. Have you no soul. These are wild flowers you are speaking of. Treasure your natural habitat. Have it cited as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Encourage your neighbours to visit and sample its delights ............. after the fruit picking. I promise you, there is plenty more such stuff around here! -- Roy Bailey West Berkshire. |
#5
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Weeds
In article , Alan Gould
writes In article , Roy Bailey writes I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? After you have strimmed off the greater part of top growth, go over the area with a mower set at its highest cut. Pick up all the surplus herbage for composting, or whatever. (Or you could mulch it round the fruit trees, they would love that) A couple of weeks later, mow it again with the cut set just a little lower. Collect up the cuttings again. Keep doing that until the patch is at the height you want it to be in the longer term. Continue mowing regularly at the chosen height, sometimes letting the cuttings fall back to feed the grassed area. That treatment will eliminate most non-grass plants other than some pretty daisies, buttercups, clovers etc. and occasional mosses. It will also give finer grasses a chance to grow and establish while the coarser slower growing types are recovering. From then, you will be able to choose a grass management plan to suit your own requirements. Thanks for this advice, Alan. The problem is that the piece of land is sloping and somewhat uneven, so mowing, even with a Flymo, is not easy. I use the strimmer very low so that it acts like a mower, but the docks and burdocks keep growing again. Although I don't let them seed they seem to reappear in the same places each year. Greater and Lesser Burdocks - Arctium lappa and A.minus are biennials. Thank God for that! I was beginning to fear that they were perennials. -- Roy Bailey West Berkshire. |
#6
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Weeds
In article , ned
writes Roy Bailey wrote: I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? Good Heavens, man. Have you no soul. These are wild flowers you are speaking of. Treasure your natural habitat. Have it cited as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Encourage your neighbours to visit and sample its delights ............. after the fruit picking. I promise you, there is plenty more such stuff around here! -- Roy Bailey West Berkshire. |
#7
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Weeds
In article , Alan Gould
writes In article , Roy Bailey writes I have a piece of ground which I laughingly call an orchard because it does actually have some fruit trees in it. It also has burdock, dock, nettle, creeping buttercup, speedwell, plantain, applemint that has escaped from elsewhere, and much more besides. Somewhere under all that is some grass which I would like to encourage. I cut this lot regularly with a strimmer, but the weeds come back again quickly. How else can I get rid of them without using chemicals? Is burdock a perennial? After you have strimmed off the greater part of top growth, go over the area with a mower set at its highest cut. Pick up all the surplus herbage for composting, or whatever. (Or you could mulch it round the fruit trees, they would love that) A couple of weeks later, mow it again with the cut set just a little lower. Collect up the cuttings again. Keep doing that until the patch is at the height you want it to be in the longer term. Continue mowing regularly at the chosen height, sometimes letting the cuttings fall back to feed the grassed area. That treatment will eliminate most non-grass plants other than some pretty daisies, buttercups, clovers etc. and occasional mosses. It will also give finer grasses a chance to grow and establish while the coarser slower growing types are recovering. From then, you will be able to choose a grass management plan to suit your own requirements. Thanks for this advice, Alan. The problem is that the piece of land is sloping and somewhat uneven, so mowing, even with a Flymo, is not easy. I use the strimmer very low so that it acts like a mower, but the docks and burdocks keep growing again. Although I don't let them seed they seem to reappear in the same places each year. Greater and Lesser Burdocks - Arctium lappa and A.minus are biennials. Thank God for that! I was beginning to fear that they were perennials. -- Roy Bailey West Berkshire. |
#8
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Weeds
In article , Roy Bailey
writes Greater and Lesser Burdocks - Arctium lappa and A.minus are biennials. Thank God for that! I was beginning to fear that they were perennials. They give that impression by re-seeding themselves. They are a much prized wild flower in some people's estimation but if you really want to be rid of them, remove all flower heads before they mature. -- Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs. |
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