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just moved and new house garden is a weed nightmare (yellow flower sort)

Last post 29-04-2010 6:29 AM by Roy Bretton. 3 replies.

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  • 27/04/2010 02:43 PM
    • mark
    • swadlincote
    • 03 May 2009
    • 15
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    hi, have recently just moved house and the new garden is a weed hot spot to say the least.

    can any one give me an idea of what i can do or use etc etc

    the patch in the middle is where the previous people had a fire so have planted some grass seed etc in there which seems to be growing ok

     

    thanks so much in advance

  • 27/04/2010 04:07 PM
    • dimitri
    • Devon
    • 14 Jan 2010
    • 158
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    Looks like a thriving infestation of dandelions (Taraxacum officinale).

     

    First thing, mow right away before they set seed, that will help reduce the risk of seeding a whole new crop, though the seeds do float for long distances so some will inevitably drift in.

     

    There are two ways to get rid of them.  You can apply a selective herbicide, which kills broad-leaf weeds but leaves grass intact.  Check with your local garden centre.  Some granular lawn dressings contain these herbicides as well as fertilisers, or they are available as liquids for spraying or watering on.  Take great care spraying herbicides, if the drops drift in the wind they can damage your valued plants, or worse, the neighbour's.  In my experience dandelions are among the easier weeds to kill with selective herbicides.  There is more advice on the RHS advice pages:

     

    http://apps.rhs.org.uk/adviceresearch/Profile.aspx?pid=369

     

    if the  link works, or go to Gardening/Advice/Problems/Lawns:weed control

     

    Or, if you have time and patience (and this isnt a very large plot), you can use an old kitchen knife to cut them off well below ground level.  There is a flat rosette of leaves attached to a deep, fleshy taproot.  Stick the knife in at an angle to cut the root as far below ground as possible and hoick the plant out.  Rather a satisfying proceedure, I find.  You do need to cut deep, because they will regrow from the remaining bit of root from quite deep down.

  • 27/04/2010 10:14 PM
    • mark
    • swadlincote
    • 03 May 2009
    • 15
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    thanks very much for your help. i'll go there tomorrow and see what they have on offer and whats more suited to me.

     

     

  • 29/04/2010 06:29 AM
    • Roy Bretton
    • United Kingdom
    • 23 Nov 2009
    • 1
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    First of all I would cut the lawn, but not to short, many people make the mistake of cutting there lawn to short. If you cut your lawn to short, weeds have a better chance of thriving, especially in drought conditions.

     As for your weed problem, I would suggest using a granular weed and feed, this is best applied, when a reasonable amount rain is forecast and ideally applied, mid way, between cuts. You can spray the weeds, but you can have the added problem of spray drift, touching other plants in your garden.

     Most garden centres can supply weed and feed products, I hope this helps your weed problem.

    http://lawnmowersandequipment.com