Creating A Beautiful Home

Insight For Reducing And Eliminating Invasive Weed Growth In Your Landscaping, Gardens, And Lawns

by Jamie Carpenter

Keeping your yard and its landscaping healthy, well-fed, watered, and maintained can make a big difference in the appearance of your yard. Yard pests, disease, and especially weeds can all wreak havoc on your landscaping health and make it look messy and unkempt. Here are some methods you can use to reduce and eliminate the weeds and their invasive growth in your yard and landscaping.

Lawn Weeds

Any number of weeds in your lawn are not a good sign for the health and condition of your lawn, as they steal essential moisture and nutrients that are intended for your lawn. If your lawn weeds are left unchecked, they can take over your entire lawn and reduce your lawn coverage. Hand pulling each weed individually is a great way to remove them, as long as you pull the entire root from the soil. To do this you'll want to make sure the lawn has been well-watered first, which will help soften the soil for full root removal.

To prevent weeds in your lawn, apply pre-emergent weed prevention early in the spring when your lawn begins growing. This type of treatment stops the weed seeds that have sat over the winter from germinating, preventing new weed growth problems. To treat existing weeds in your lawn, use a lawn treatment to kill weeds and fertilize your lawn, which helps to boost your lawn's health. You can also hire a professional weed prevention service to treat your lawn throughout the season, applying treatments to fight each stage in the year's weed growth.

Landscaping Weeds

Weed growth in your landscaping areas are another problem that you may need to take a different approach to prevent and remove. The type of vegetation in your landscaped areas are mostly broad-leaf plants, just as the weeds are, and using a broad-leaf herbicide will harm your vegetation as well. If you use an herbicide, be sure you use one safe for use around trees, landscaping, and gardens so you don't kill off your landscaping along with the weeds.

Another technique in your landscaped areas is to cover the soil around your vegetation plants with a landscaping fabric or a mulch. This prevents weed seed germination and growth by preventing moisture and sunlight from reaching the soil. And because this barrier sits upon your soil, it is difficult for weed seeds to make their way into the soil to germinate.

Additionally, you can utilize a landscape drip irrigation watering system to deliver water only to your landscaped plants. This keeps water only to the areas of your vegetation growth and does not water surrounding soils, which prevents weeds from growing.

For more information about weed prevention in your yard, visit sites like http://snydersweedcontrol.com/.

Share