Weeds: Offense or defense?

Weeds: Offense or defense?

June 25, 2012 at 4:00PM
(The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Weeds are unwelcome thugs in the garden. They compete with the plants you care about for nourishment, moisture and space. Even worse, if you don't deal with them, they can take over a garden. Different weeds sprout and grow at different times of the growing season. Instead of constantly weeding, why not stop weed seeds before they grow? Lay down a layer of mulch plus Preen garden weed preventer. Preen stops seeds from sprouting for up to three to four months, including those seeds already in garden soil or mulch plus those carried in by the wind, birds or animals. Whatever you do, don't let existing weeds go to seed. Just one chickweed plant can produce up to 15,000 seeds each year!  www.preen.com.  (PRNewsFoto/Preen)
(ASSOCIATED PRESS - PR NEWSWIRE/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Weeding isn't the WORST garden chore in the world. It's satisfying to grab a fistul of weed and feel the roots give way -- plus you get the instant gratification of seeing a cleaner, tidier garden.

Grab and pull, grab and pull. Once you get into the rhythm, it's oddly therapeutic.

But after two hours of grabbing and pulling under the hot sun yesterday afternoon, I've had quite enough weed therapy, thank you very much.

The patches I weeded look pretty good, but there are others I never made it to. And the patches I weeded two weeks ago need weeding again, thanks to all our recent rain.

I've been playing defense against weeds. It's time for a stronger offense, I decided. Not chemicals. My garden needs to become naturally less weed-friendly.

So here's my action plan:

Step 1: More perennials, planted more densely. Landscape designer Jamie Durie, who was in town earlier this month, is a fan of this method. "I don't endorse bald spots," he said. "I plant abundantly. I don't even give weeds room to pop up." (http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle/homegarden/157260875.html)

I need more big, hardy perennials like bee balm and ligularia and cardinal flower, that come up reliably and take up a lot of garden space.

Step 2: Mulch. This one will be a little more tricky to execute, at least in my yard. My biggest weed headache is the area covered with river rock in the front. Whoever installed my landscape, about 20 years ago, apparently laid plastic, then put dirt and the rocks on top. It looked good when we moved in 16 years ago, but every year, more weeds sprout between the rocks. This year, there was more green than gray.

I'd love to replace the rocks with a thick layer of wood mulch. But removing all those rocks will be such a nightmare that I'm tempted to just put the mulch on top. Anyone out there ever tried that? Or should I resign myself to a weekend of rock removal?

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