Can you guess what these 2 garden paths and part of a flowerbed have in common?
No weeds! And why? They were covered all Winter with old black plastic sheeting! The stuff was used several year elsewhere, had rip and holes and cutouts for various resons. but folded up a couple times, it worked great to smother the winter weeds in the paths and bed and then cook whatever was left in the hot sun the past few weeks!
I spread them out to dry, but actually I have a new use for them. I have some annoying vine that a neighbor planted then mowed to death. But not before it escaped to my yard where I can't mow. This Summer will be a 'KILL THOSE VINES" project. I don't like using herbicides near the garden, so I will use the string trimmer to cut them to ground level, then cover the areas with the many-times-used black plastic. I have lots of bricks and stones to hold the plastic down.
They have gotten established in the old asparagus bed. The asparagus is long gone (lasts about 20 years and they were planted 30 years ago). Because there are also junk tree saolings growing there, I cut them down to ground level. Obnoxiously, that won't kill them. But I have an old piece of plywood that just fits. So I will set that down AND put black plastic on top weighted down with old cinder blocks. That old framed bed should be good to use again in 2 years. Sometimes, things take time to passively improve.
The 2 dwarf apple trees have been in place for 2 decades and I've never gotten a ripe one from them. The Evil Squirrels take then away before they are ripe. And poison ivy has taken over the ground beneath them. So very soon, I will use the hedge trimmer to cut the poison ivy to ground level (wearing a mask and elbow length rubber gloves that will go straight into soapy water in the basement laundry tub after), cover the ground with more of the old black plastic, and cut down the apple trees.
I will use a chain saw to lop the 3" thick apple wood trunks into small 1" slices for B-B-Q smoking, and wait for the poison ivy to smother under the plastic by next year.
Poison ivy abounds here. I have 2 neighbors who have parts of their yards they pay no attention to, and the stuff grows rampant. Birds are immune to poison ivy and eat the berries, so they spread around all over. I sometimes find new poison ivy plants growing where no poison ivy plant is near, so it has to be from seeds from bird-droppings.
Talking to my neighbors about it has no effect. I even offerred to spray them myself, but they declined. I meant the poison ivy, of course, but would consider the neighbors for being so oblivious. LOL!
6 comments:
Hey - if the neighbours aren't gardeners, believe that they're not allowing the poison ivy to run free on purpose. Just got different priorities I guess.
Megan
Sydney, Australia
Yeah, any part of the yard they can't use, they ignore. And the bad parts are expanding. I sometimes wonder what they will do wheh the entire back yard is covered with poison ivy.
I wonder if the county has rules about that?
Man, I have that problem next door to me. Occasionally I have posted a pic of it in my human blog but when the weeds are waist high..yes, waist high in the back along with pest English Ivy, poison ivy and all things awful...and the rats are tiptoeing through...it's hard and embarrassing and it spreads to my yard. They also have an amazing amount of junk thrown out there front back and sides. The front yard is about knee high not waist high weeds. They get a relative to whack the weeds for the sake of the 3 kids I guess, every 8-9 weeks. Just enough for them to have a small square. Every noxious weed known to the town is in there. Spreading to MY yard. So, I feel your pain.
LOVE the black plastic idea. I must try that beside my fence! IF I can find any.
That is a great idea to use the plastic to keep weeds away.
Who WANTS poison ivy anywhere near them ?? Crazy people. Especially with you offering to do the work.
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