Black Covers Can Put Weeds to Bed… For Good

Have you experienced one or more of these garden scenarios?

  • It’s early April and chickweed, henbit and other winter annual weeds are growing so thickly in a vegetable or flower bed that the soil can’t be seen.
  • The winter rye cover crop you mowed last week is growing back.
  • You tilled and raked a bed that you couldn’t plant right away and now weeds are coming up everywhere.
  • The rainy summer weather is favoring weeds over crops so that the weeds are taking over walkways and dominating beds that you want to plant with fall crops.
  • Neighboring plots in your community garden have been abandoned and weeds are growing wild and reproducing!
I can’t bear to look… I’m going back inside
This stirrup hoe is great at removing large weeds, but brings lots of weed seeds up to the top two inches of soil where they have a good chance of germinating.

Un-controlled weeds compete with garden plants for water and nutrients, are hosts for insect pests and diseases, and can demoralize the toughest gardeners. Tilling, pulling, chopping, and hoeing are all fine weed control techniques under the right conditions, but they also disturb soil allowing even more weed seeds to germinate and flourish.

There’s another way: occultation. The common dictionary definition is “an event that occurs when one object is hidden by another object that passes between it and the observer.” For gardeners and farmers, it’s covering the soil to create a dark, warm, moist environment. In 2-4 weeks, this no-till technique can:

  1. smother and kill young weeds
  2. smother larger weeds and grasses
  3. accelerate the decomposition of mowed cover crops and weeds
  4. promote the germination of weed seeds and then smother the seedlings
Weed barrier pinned down over a bed filled with winter annual weeds. It was ready to plant in two weeks. Tough perennial broad-leaf weeds and grasses may be weakened but not killed.

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