Category Archives: spring

Spring Weeds ID 2

As Spring progresses, the intentionally placed plants are not the only plants growing on the Lot. Here is another installment of Spring Weeds. I’d like to call the sequel The Creeps in honor of this first weed which can drive a gardener (or this gardener at least) to drink. I referenced the handy-dandy An IPM Pocket Guide for Weed Identification in Nurseries and Landscapes to identify these.

Ground Ivy

Known also as Creeping Charlie (Glechoma hederacea L.), this perennial grows low along the ground and has approximately 1″ kidney-shaped to rounded leaves and long leave stems. The plant is a member of the Lamiaceae (mint) family.

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If you can get ahold of the vining portion of the plant, it can be pulled up fairly easy in long strips. The multiple roots along the vine are shallow. Yes, that’s right, this plant has root nodes along the entire length of the vine. Here is a picture of one of said nodes and the root structure.

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This ability creates large swathes of ground ivy. It also can spread by seed. The flowers are “purplish blue” and “funnel-shaped.” I usually find ground ivy along the Lot’s fence line, the house’s foundation, and the edges of beds as shown below. I’ve also seen ground ivy inundate a lawn in areas where the turf grasses do not grow well.

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Common Mallow

The leaves on this next annual (or biennial) are “rounded with a heart-shaped base, palmately veined, hairy and found on long, slender, hairy petioles.” Common Mallow (Malva neglecta Wallr.) can reproduce by seeds or stem fragments. The flowers have “five white and purple-ringed petals.” This weed was found in a thin area of mulch.

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Buckhorn Plantain

Leaves on Buckhorn Plantain are thin and spear-like with parallel veins. The leaves have a smooth margin and all grow from a central rosette. Plantago lanceolata L. has a tall stalk with cylindrical flowers. This simple perennial reproduces through seed and basal shoots. I usually find these on the Lot in bare areas of the lawn and in the dirt of the drives.

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Yellow Rocket

This upright winter annual or biennial (Barbarea vulgaris R. Br.). belongs to the mustard (Brassicaceae) family. The weed can survive mowing, but is often found in areas where there is recently disturbed soil and little turf. It spreads by reseeding.

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Here is a closer shot of the glossy leaves and distinctly lobed pattern on the more mature leaves.

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And this is a shot of the flower head with an interested bee. So, the gardener is giving this weed a pass until the plant begins prepping seeds. I’ll hand pull it then.

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TBD

This one I am not so sure of since I couldn’t find it yet.

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Here is a close up of the hairy leaves.

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This is a close up photo of the flower clusters.

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If anyone has any guesses, please leave the name in the comments. Thanks!

Spring Weeds ID

As the weather warms and Spring arrives, green shoots are appearing all over the Lot. Some of the shoots belong to intentionally-placed perennials, while others do not. Trees, birds, and squirrels all have deposited seeds over last season. Weeds gone to seed because of my late-season-gardening “Meh” attitude are now appearing in the cracks between pavers, bare spots in mulch, and borders of beds I still have not formerly edged.

When I first started doing this gardening thing, I was intimidated by this Spring race toward the sunlight. What plants were supposed to be in the garden? Which plants were weeds? Which should I pull? I didn’t want to wait until the plant got too far along and possibly developed enormous taproots making it impossible to remove. Dandelions anyone?

This season I wanted to document some of the first garden weeds out of the gate. These photos were taken back in mid-April. Over the Winter, I purchased flip books from WMMGA through MSUE’s bookstore. An IPM Pocket Guide for Weed Identification in Nurseries and Landscapes by Steven A. Gower and Robert J. Richardson was a helpful guide.

Purple Deadnettle

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This first weed is purple deadnettle (Lamium purpureum L.), belonging to the Lamiaceae, or mint family. Persistence seems to be a family trait. The plant has square stems branching out from a central base with hairy leaves. An distinguishing trait belonging to this specific deadnettle is the blush of purple/red on the triangle-shaped leaves up near the flower.

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The weed is a broadleaf, winter annual. The seeds germinate in the fall in disturbed soil. I often see deadnettle on the Lot growing near the house foundation, near the borders of the still unedged garden beds, and in areas where the lawn is thin. According to the Purdue Extension, cultural control of the weed includes “proper mowing (higher mowing heights), proper fertilization (some rather than none to improve turf density), irrigation to prevent summer dormancy during drought, and aerification of compacted areas to improve turf health.” I usually hand pull it since it is not in an overwhelming quantity on the Lot.

Bitter Cress

This next weed has popped up all over the Lot this Spring. Either I had not noticed last season or I completely failed my Perception check. I don’t remember it running this rampant before.

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Cardamine parviflora (known also as Sand Bittercress, Dry Land Bittercress, and Small-flowered Bittercress) was a bit trickier to identify. I finally found it using the University of Wisconsin Weed ID Tool. Bittercress is also a winter annual. I’m seeing a theme here. However, the elongated seed pods  on this one explode, sending the seeds flying away from the plant. Not only are they in mass quantity on the Lot, but they’re armed! Ugh.

Several sites noted Bittercress preferring more moist conditions where turf is thin and even favoring shade. It is a common weed in nurseries and greenhouses, then traveling home with unknowing gardeners in the containers of purchased plants. Cultural controls to manage this include mowing or hand pulling the plant before it sets seed or even before it flowers.

Shepard’s Purse

Finally, this weed was next to the garage foundation in a new bed created last Fall where there was no mulch.

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041416_weed2Foliage

I identified it as shepherd’s purse (Capsella bursa-pastoris), yet another winter or summer annual usually found in an area of disturbed soil. MSU Extension Turf Weeds website says “Consistent mowing and patience are the key to managing shepherd’s purse.”

Can’t I Just Spray Them?

Using herbicides on unwanted weeds in the garden is a tricky task. In my experience, many home gardeners do not take the time to research the weed to eradicate. That leads to some pretty nasty consequences. In fact, when we first purchased the Lot, the previous homeowner told us a story of trying to spray for weeds in the backyard and how he succeeded in killing the entire lawn.

Yup. Grass is a plant too.

There are many factors to consider:

  • What is the weed?
  • How does it propagate?
  • Where is it in its life cycle?
  • What other plants around it can be affected?
  • How long will the herbicide persist in the soil afterward?

And there are these guys too…

Early Spring Bee Early Spring Bee 2

Here the bittercress is providing a food source for early Spring bees. In gardens with little to no blooms during this time, the weeds are available for the pollinators.

How Important Is “Weed-free?”

The Other Half and I had made the decision awhile ago not to use herbicides and pesticides on the Lot. We are not growing commercial crops. We love our pollinators, birds, toads, etc. We have four-footed garden management whom we do not want to poison. We have no use for a lawn.

In our situation, the only negative effect of these weeds are possible disapproving neighbors. We are lucky enough not to have to deal with the Joneses of suburbia, so I feel our little urban Lot is doing okay in that area as well. I continue to hand pull the weeds in the garden beds and eventually the others will be mowed and shaded out by the incoming lawn.

Veggies 7.0

This past week we had some beautiful Spring weather, allowing me to keep the office windows open from morning to night. With the birdsong and warm breeze drifting into the room, I had a hard time keeping my butt in the chair to work.

Usually we have our cool season crops planted at the beginning of the month. Timing and schedules did not allow for that this season. This morning the Management and I worked on a quick sketch for the two 4’x4′ raised beds in the backyard of the Lot. Despite the recommendation of more catnip, this is what I planted today.

Veggie Garden Plan

2016 Spring Cold Crop Lineup

  • Bloomsdale Long Standing Spinach
  • French Breakfast Radish
  • Baby Bok Choy Pak Choi
  • All Season Butterhead Mix Lettuce
  • Hollow Crown Parsnips
  • Oregon Sugar Pod II Peas (large container & teepee)
  • Red Cored Chantenay Carrot (not sure if these seeds aren’t too old to still be viable)
  • Green Scallions & Nasturtium (container)
  • Bright Lights Swiss Chard & English Daisy (container)