I realized the other day that I haven't written in some time simply because the weather has been too good. My typical day is to go to work for 10 hours and then come home and drop to the ground and start pulling weeds. Most of the vegetables are up and growing, but then so too are the weeds. It rained this weekend and I am quite sure that all the carefully planted and cultivated vegetables grew about 3 inches, unfortunately, the weeds grew 6.
Weeds are the bane of every gardener's existence. They outnumber us about 6 billion to one and they will survive and spread like wildfire despite our best attempts at controlling them.
Some people like to use chemicals, but the effects of those chemicals are similar to the use of antibiotics on bacteria....resistance develops and we are left fighting bigger and meaner weeds that are harder to kill. Not to mention the unwanted health effects such as cancer and other chronic debilitating diseases, or the environmental impacts like colony collapse disorder of bees, fish kills, song bird death, etc...yeah, I know, the government, EPA, and all the chemical producers swear up and down that it is safe to use, but I have seen a few too many farmers dying of cancer and I, personally, don't feel like being a guinea pig in the corporate money making machine that is agricultural chemical manufacturing. All right, I will now attempt to step down off my soap box.
Some people "weed" the garden by hand or with a hoe or rake. To some extent I will do this, but I only have so much time in a week - between working full time and raising five kids.... hand weeding isn't going to work for long. It is, however, a great job for kids to do that are looking to earn a few extra dollars, or who get into trouble and need a little hard work to help clear their head.
As much as I love growing food, I hate weeding vegetables and I will do whatever I can to spend less time weeding and more time growing and processing food or putzing in my flower garden, so I have started weeding even before the weeds come up (or the vegetables for that matter). I weed once and then I am done.
Now I have you wondering don't I?
It requires two fairly easy to come by items - straw and newspaper.
I was blessed with buying a farm that has a very old barn on it that is filled with exceptionally old, but functional straw. Hopefully, by the time the barn is finally depleted of straw I will have some other source (or possibly my own) lined up, but for now I rely on straw that is probably about as old as I am. Hay works well too as does grass clippings although sometimes with those two items they can re-sprout and create more problems than they are worth.
The newspapers have never been a problem to find, but it comes down to "know your neighbors" and either have them save up their papers or get to know your local neighborhood convenience store owner and have them give you all the old papers that didn't sell. I have also periodically gone dumpster diving in the recycle bin for newspapers - especially Wall Street Journals - I figure if all those financial wizards on Wall Street can't improve life for us a little, at least the associated paper can be put to good use.
Armed with this newspaper, straw and a water hose I set out to eliminate all potential weeds from the cucumbers and squash before they even poke their heads through the soil. The concept is extremely simple - cover all unplanted ground with a thick layer of newspaper, wet it down and cover it with straw and then wet that down. The only reading that I ever do of a newspaper anymore happens as I lay them down in my garden and I contemplate how quickly the news becomes old - how earthquakes and tsunamis get swept away in the revolutions that take over the middle east and then those are superseded by upcoming Presidential elections and tornadoes in the Midwest. I see them all laid out in my garden and then I watch all the news just disappear under a matt of straw. It is a beautiful thing. To think that the media is keeping down the weeds in my garden may be the best compliment I am able to give them.
One hour and forty seven minutes later I am free from having to weed my cucumbers and squash for the rest of the summer and slowly the newspaper will break down and next spring I will simply till it into the soil as more organic matter. One less area to weed leaves that much more time available to plant and harvest.
Weed less, plant more.
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