Native Garden Weed Control
As a gardener, weeds are the bane of one’s existence. Other maintenance tasks pale in comparison to dealing with interlopers in carefully planned beds. Luckily, there are steps you can take to at least minimize the weeds in your landscape and prevent these competitive pests from spoiling the appearance of the garden and the health of your plants. Proper preparation of the area in which you plant your natives is important – not only soil prep but also removal of existing weeds, especially perennial varieties. Whether you harvest your own natives or purchase them from a nursery, make sure the containers or the site where you harvest does not contain weeds. Nursery plants may come with non-native weeds, which are somehow even worse than native varieties. If you inspect and remove competitive volunteers before planting, protecting native plants from weeds will be easier in the future. If you are in the planning stages of a native garden, consider using a corn gluten meal application. This is a natural pre-emergent herbicide but will not work once weeds have germinated. Eventually, your native garden will fill in and shade out any potential new weeds and weed control should be a breeze.
How to Control Native Garden Weeds
If a site has been neglected, killing weeds in a native plant garden will be more challenging. You could use a selective herbicide but these come with potential side effects to other plants, you and the earth that are undesirable. If you have a very large site, likely you will have to resort to herbicides unless you have goats, but smaller gardens can safely do native garden weed control with a little labor and some mulch. Hand weeding is one of those chores that almost everyone hates, but it is a bit more palatable with a partner to talk to or a pair of ear buds. Once the site is clear of weeds, use organic mulch around the root zones of your plants to conserve moisture and, more importantly, prevent weed pests.
Protecting Native Plants from Weeds
Weeds suck water and nutrients from the soil that your wanted plants require. They also can choke out certain plants. But in a large-scale native landscape, a certain level of weeds must be tolerated unless you want to resort to chemical warfare. In areas that have been mulched and develop weed seedlings, simply stir the soil and uproot them. Patrol the garden weekly for pests and the task of weeding won’t become such a chore with established deep rooted species. The catch ‘em while their young approach helps prevent an unchecked infestation. As natives establish, they need less irrigation. Over time this will lessen weed seedlings as well. Once the garden has matured, killing weeds in a native plant garden will become less of a chore and just a once in a while maintenance issue.
Note: Any recommendations pertaining to the use of chemicals are for informational purposes only. Chemical control should only be used as a last resort, as organic approaches are safer and more environmentally friendly.