JKR
Silver Member
I use Ground Clear from Home Depot. It work the year and only cost $36.00
Weed flaming is an accepted method of weed control for organic farming. My sister and her husband's family run a fairly large organic farm at LaConner and have been using this for a number of years now. I have used this method as well, it is a bit difficult to resist the urge to burn the little huggers to crisp though.
I had to post my newest idea.:ashamed: So i was getting sick of pulling the weeds out of the garden. I sit having a beer and think " must be a better way". The light bulb goes off in my head (maybe 15watt):laughing:. I came up with a blow torch idea for controlling the weeds. So i look at the harbor freight flyer and sure enough there it is propane blow torch with a 25% off coupon to boot. I said why not. $15 dollars later i arrive home with the new toy, unscrew the propane tank from the grill. So i head to the garden with torch and tank in hand. Fire up the torch and pull the trigger. Off i go with a smile on my face hoping none of the neighbors can see me. I look over and see my wife walking over with our son (3yrs old) to the garden. Her exact words " Your such an idiot". My son says "Dad what are you doing". I said son i like to think of it as my new method of redneck weed control. My wife later said she should have filmed me and posted on You Tube. End result guys it works pretty good. One word of advice don't get to close to the bean plants. My question now really is does this still qualify as an "ORGANIC GARDEN"? I had to share with the guys of TBN firgure some may like it.
I've seen commercial weed killers used on the sidewalk in organic neighborhoods around here basically a big steam cleaner that squirts hot water/steam at the plants cooks them it works well but is more expensive than chemical weed killers
If you can out-compete with desirable plants, you're way ahead of the game. I thought I'd achieved that with my cool season fescue and gotten the Canada thistle suppressed, but then the township mowed and it was game over for my small victory. Now I'm back to fighting the stuff and it's gotten a year of roots grown in the meantime. If I had a tiller, I'd till it. If I had a plough, I'd plow it. My 10% gly didn't do the job (or they're just not showing it after 5 weeks?), so now I'm wondering what it's going to take. Flame would be good, but now there's the dead stuff from what did get burnt by the gly to fuel grass fires. I'm dealing with a 20x400' patch that has a lot of wood debris in it too (slash piles).
I may just scrape the whole area with my root grapple and see if that sets them back or just exposes more seed.