![]() |
| ->Home > publications > weedsgarden | ||||
Weeds and Your Gardenreturn to Weeds and Your Garden, CONTENTSPREPARE GARDEN BEDS CAREFULLY Prepare your garden or landscape beds in ways that prevent weed growth. New beds If you’re creating a new bed on top of established turf, try a method that is easy but requires patience. Lay down two or more thicknesses of heavy cardboard or 10–20 thicknesses of newspaper. The paper will block most weeds from emerging through the bed; those that do will be weakened by the effort. (Alternatively, you can yank up the turf, shake out and reserve the soil, and compost the grass.) Now pile organic matter onto the paper. Put the coarsest on the bottom. For the top few inches, use compost mixed with topsoil. In weedy areas, the deeper the bed, the better! You can plant into this bed, or better yet, sow a cover crop and use the bed next year.
Established beds If you’re preparing an established bed for planting, decide if more than 30 percent of the garden is covered with weeds. If so, your best bet might be to remove perennials and prepare the bed like a new one. If weeds are scattered, dig out the toughest root systems by loosening and removing the entire root. Pull by hand the medium-sized weeds that will cooperate. Then till. Tilling: a mixed blessing Tilling the soil—either mechanically or by hand—destroys some weeds, but also allows some weed seeds to germinate. The timing and depth of tillage determines how many weed seeds are exposed to light, air, and water. Many gardeners recommend only light tillage (2 inches deep), to bring fewer weed seeds to the surface. Two weeks before planting an established bed, loosen the top 3 inches of soil to be planted. A day (or less) before you plant, till the top 3 inches again to prevent weeds from getting ahead of new plantings. Mulch after planting to further reduce potential weed problems. When working around existing perennials or shrubs, the rules are the same: don’t loosen any soil areas you aren’t planting; keep the soil layers intact where possible; and, if the soil is worked, rake shallowly to disturb emerging weed seedlings. Fall renovation In the fall, till or loosen the top 7 inches of beds with a shovel. Incorporate soil amendments, such as compost. Two weeks later, rake the surface to defeat any weed seedlings. | ||||
![]() | ||||
About This Site |
These pages are maintained by the New York State IPM Program, part of Cornell Cooperative Extension. All material is protected by Section 107 of the 1976 copyright law. Copyright is held by Cornell University and the New York State IPM Program. |