Weeding Techniques

Wow, never thought of Amaranth as a weed
Aside from maybe mint, it is the WORST aggressive vegetable I've ever planted. Worse than tuberous sunflowers, which are bad, thistles, dandelions, purslane, plantain, horsetail. The seeds last forever in the soil. Takes years to get them all to sprout so you can hoe each plant.
 
I Love aggressive turnips!!! They scatter thousands of little seeds, fill in places where the weeds want to grow, if you forget about them they grow 3 ft tall and make More seeds, AND you can pull them out of the ground any ole time you please.
Turnip dreams...
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If it is a vegetable amaranth then we are probably not talking about
Love-lies-bleeding
Prince's Feather
Joseph's-coat
or, farther afield to Celosia and Gomphrena.

Those are probably all edible. More traditional edibles include grain amaranth and, farther afield, spinach, chard and beets.

Some in the family are considered weeds. Several of those are native to North America and thrive in disturbed soil so they can invade farm fields. An example is redroot pigweed, invasive but native. Of course, since there is a market for grain amaranth and amaranth flour, Cooperative Extension has advice for farmers wanting to grow it as a crop

Steve
 
Not sure where I found this tip for pulling carrots so I can't credit the original source-- but after breaking off many carrots I discovered that this technique actually works on all but really, really long carrots. First you push down firmly on the shoulders of the carrot, plunging it about 1/2" into the ground; this action severs the fine feeder roots that anchor the carrot in the soil. Next you grab the green top growth nice and low down, and gently pull the carrot straight up. It is remarkable how easy it is in most cases. One extra step, but I find that it sure makes a difference. 🥕
Thanks for the tip : )
 
Sorry, just that I have amaranth seeds never planted...now, I'm not so sure!!! :eek::eek::eek:
Actually, you mentioned you have birds right, that pillage around? You might be okay, they probably like those seeds!

This is the one I'd recommend avoiding. I haven't found others quite as bad, but then, I sort of avoided a lot of them after this one. I grew a new one last year, I guess I'll see if it's as bad.
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Thanks for the heads-up about amaranth. I'm planning to grow it this year and will attempt to remove any seed heads I'm not using.

The worst weed I've encountered in the garden has been sorrel. My second garden is in an ideal area as far as the land is level and it's in full sun. However it is also the part of the yard in which the grass really didn't grow much. Occasionally I'd find a scrawny, struggling sorrel plant and grab a few leaves for a salad. Well now that I've added raised beds and heavily mulched that area with wood chips, the sorrel thrived and I decided to leave one plant in the corner of the garden. Well that plant not only thrived, but has put out runners and it has showed up in a bed three feet away. Spent quite a few hours pulling it out of the beds and paths last year and have deemed it no longer welcome in the garden. It's even more aggressive and harder to eradicate than mint!
 
Aside from maybe mint, it is the WORST aggressive vegetable I've ever planted. Worse than tuberous sunflowers, which are bad, thistles, dandelions, purslane, plantain, horsetail. The seeds last forever in the soil. Takes years to get them all to sprout so you can hoe each plant.
My mint plants has been planted in between the various plants in a border in my front garden just by my rose bush and wormwood bush. Therefore I've had no issues at all. I have a chocolate and peppermint plants.
 
Bramble is one of my problems.
I have a raised bed but haven't had very much success with it l.
This year I would like to plant some squash seeds I've collected from a squash, but brambles have firmly established their selves in side it.

I almost gave up on the raised bed when slugs and caterpillars ate all of my brocoli and asparagus. So I hope to figure out how to use these squash seeds, I haven't tried this before
 
one way to deal with a really bad infestation is to dig deep holes and scrape the surface of the soil into the hole and then put a layer of cardboard over the stuff on the bottom of the hole and then bury it all. as long as you don't disturb that deepest layer the seeds will stay down there and not be able to germinate. you may however find that some weed seeds will survive being buried deeply but it will not be as many as what you have in the top layer of soil from a real weedy garden that has dropped a lot of seeds.

my body likes digging so this sort of gardening is great for me. i do a much shallower lower till version for my spring and fall garden cleanups as any weeds then can become food for the next plantings.
 

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