Organic Weed and Pest Control
Organic Gardening is the way Nature intended its vegetables, herbs and fruits to be grown.
Since
organic gardening, by definition, means avoiding
harsh chemicals to control pests, weeds and diseases
in your garden, care is needed when picking products
for these uses. Hand weeding and hand picking
of small insect pests and fences and barriers
against larger pests are the traditional methods
used by organic gardeners, there are times when
other methods make good sense. We have found the
products you need to make your disease, weed, and
pest control easier.
Pest Control
Birds,
ladybugs and praying mantises are the gardener's
best friends when it comes to insect control.
Birds can be encouraged into the garden by providing
a feeder, a birdbath, or by providing plants that
grow berries for them to eat.
Ladybugs are now for sale by the pint, quart or
gallon. The average-sized garden can get by on a
quart or less, as there will be about 25,000 to
30,000 bugs per quart. The cost is generally less
than five dollars a quart. The average adult ladybug
consumes between 40 and 50 aphids a day.
Praying mantis cases are also available and each one
hatches up to 400 young. The cost is rather nominal
for a case. A few gardeners have reported that this
insect disappears rather rapidly from the garden, so
you might want to experiment with just a few to
begin with. They will eat any insect they can catch.
Weed Control
Get them before they start...
Weeds compete with garden plants for nutrients,
space, and sunlight. Weeds can make your otherwise
tidy organic garden appear scraggly, and weeds
harbor insect pests that carry diseases. The best
way to control weeds without chemical herbicides is
to prevent them from establishing themselves in your
garden.
Adding a 3-inch layer of organic mulch is one of the
best methods you can use to prevent weeds. Mulch
prevents sunlight from reaching weed seeds,
preventing them from germinating. Mulch retains
moisture in the soil and keeps it from compacting,
so that you can easily pull young weeds as they
sprout.
You can choose bagged wood chips or shredded bark
for your garden mulch, but compost makes excellent
mulch. If you use compost or other finely textured
mulch like grass clippings, replace it as frequently
as once a month, as it breaks down quickly.
If you are preparing to dig or till a new plot of
exposed earth, devote a day to removing as many
weeds as possible first. Many perennial weeds, like
bindweed and thistle, spread by means of rhizomes or
creeping stems. If you leave root segments behind,
your tiller could distribute these viable plant
parts throughout your garden, multiplying your weed
problem a hundredfold.
You can make the greenhouse effect work for you by
baking weeds and their seeds in the sun before you
plant a barren plot. In the summer, cut all existing
weeds to ground level. Water the area thoroughly,
lay a sheet of clear plastic over the entire plot.
Old shower curtain liners work well for this chore.
Pin the plastic down with metal u-shaped stakes so
the wind doesn't move the plastic sheets. If you use
a single large sheet, weigh the center portion down
with rocks to prevent cooling air pockets from
forming.
After 8-10 weeks, the suns radiant energy will have
sufficiently raised the temperature of the soil so
that all weeds and seeds are no longer viable. As an
added benefit, solarization kills many soil-borne
diseases and pests. Your organic plot is now ready
for a fall planting of cool weather vegetables.
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