A beautiful iris garden in Monterey Bay that does not belong to the Weed of the Month Club! |
Every beautifully groomed garden needs a great iris--my favorite new to me iris this year--Jerico Springs |
Morning glory (Calystegia
) arrived at this yard in mushroom compost that I had bought to build
up the soil in the back of the yard. So often trying to solve one
problem results in the arrival of a new issue. Roundup was suppose
to be the cure all for morning glory, but like most panaceas it
turned out to be less than was promised. Morning glory is amazingly
vigorous—its roots have been found 10 feet down into the
ground in trenches and morning glory seed can germinate for more than
10 years. Once in the garden, eradication is not really going to
happen, so the focus has to be on keeping it under control. I have
learned to never let morning glory flower since that only exacerbates
the problem. Having reduced the morning glory infestation to sprigs
here and there, I use a small quart spray bottle with Roundup and
that does work.
Spurge (Euphorbia maculata) is
another weed that is not only a total pest, but requires immediate
attention. After letting it get out of hand for a couple of years, I
have found that the best solution is to nip it at ground level when
it just has a few leaves. My tool of choice is an O-ring hoe; the
sharp 0-ring is perfect for spot weeding. Unfortunately the
manufacture seems to be out of business and I keep having to replace
the handle, but that is a small price to pay for spurge control.
Last year I thought I really had spurge on the run. One day I was
cleaning the walk when I noticed what seemed to be spurge, but not
the normal all green clone that I usually find. Yip, my spurge now
has a brown and green clone that is hard to spot—once again the
high hopes of eradication have been dashed.
Nut grass (Cyperus rotundus)
arrived in the yard by hiding in the roots of iris rhizomes that had
not been properly and thoroughly cleaned. There was a time that I
despaired that the nut grass was beyond control, but then I found
Manage (no longer made, but I continue to use it up since one ounce
was only slightly less expensive than a ounce of gold). At first I
had to use the Solo backpack sprayer over large areas and Manage does
work, though slowly. It translocates slowly to the roots and the
nuts, so the kill is gradual over 3-4 weeks. Years into the battle,
I am now down to hitting nut grass with the small spray bottle, but
total eradication is most likely a phantom.
Dock (Rumex crispus ) was in the
yard when I moved here and in recent reading, I learned that the
young leaves are eatable, though I am not sure why anyone would want
to eat it. The county agriculture inspector told me that the
solution was hoeing them off at the ground or Roundup. With its
long, branched taproot, hoeing only seems to encourage more growth
and Roundup seems to be the best solution if applied with great care.
I've had to use the Solo backpack on large areas, but now I am back
to the spray bottle since I can drip Roundup on dock leaves around
irises without spray on the iris leaves.
With all chemicals, correct application
is vital. Roundup will “tulip” iris flowers, so any time that I
use it over a large area, I wash off any nearby iris foliage when I
am done; Roundup damage does not seem to be permanent, but the loss
of good bloom for one year can be hard to take—I did a major round
of cursing the neighbors a few years back when 40% of the iris
bloomed with Roundup damage to to their gardener using it for
everything and anything. When using Manage, Manage splash seems to
interrupt the correct expression of color in irises and daylilies,
but the effects wear off within a few months.
No matter how hard we all try, the
weeds will always be with us. It does not help, either, if you have
neighbors who allow their weeds to grow unchecked—on the east of
the lot, I fight the encroachment of Bermuda grass from that
neighbor; on the west of the lot, the avid gardener has given up any
effort to control weeds (or snails, but that is another story) and I
have to watch for nut grass sprigs invading under the fence. Just as
we have the pageant of color in the garden starting in the spring, we
also have the pageant of weeds to entertain and disgust us.
Another lovely, weed free garden at Napa County |