Why I Stopped Weeding the Garden | The BEST Weed Control Tip

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 май 2022
  • Get a signed copy of my NEW book The Self-Sufficiency Garden: www.regenerative.press/book-s...
    This video shows you a simple approach to weed control that can completely shift how you approach your garden because after all, us gardeners can get caught doing a lot of weeding! I hope you get a lot from this, and share the same excitement I have with this new approach for controlling weeds in the vegetable garden.
    Link to blog that inspired this video: lovenfreshflowers.com/2021/02...
    Ambassador for Gardena: www.gardena.com/uk/
    📷Patreon
    Exclusive content for gardeners wanting more from their space: / huwrichards
    ✒️Online Courses
    Planting Plan Short Course: abundanceacademy.online/p/the...
    More Food Less Effort Course: morefoodlesseffort.com/
    Kitchen Garden Fermentation: abundanceacademy.online/p/hom...
    Use code PLAN20 for 20% off the Productive Planting Plan Course: abundanceacademy.online/p/the...
    🔗Social
    Facebook: / huwrichardso. .
    Instagram: / huwsgarden
    🧵Clothing
    Awesome clothing designed for vegetable gardeners: huwrichards.teemill.com/
    -🍴Delicious Garden Recipes
    Farmer & Chef / farmer.and.chef
    #weedcontrol #permaculture #gardeningtips
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 886

  • @Psalm2710_
    @Psalm2710_ 2 года назад +661

    Dandelions, chickweed, clover, and many more weeds are edible so I keep them in my garden and add them to my diet. I know most people don't want to do that, but its something to consider since many "weeds" are more nutritious than the normal vegetables. Love your channel!

    • @ukeuke5128
      @ukeuke5128 2 года назад +13

      I like the idea of dandelions as food, but I am also happy that I don't have to deal with it in my region.

    • @debpearce3786
      @debpearce3786 2 года назад +25

      The chickens need greens too!

    • @nicholeregul4906
      @nicholeregul4906 2 года назад +34

      We keep "native greens" in the walk ways or corners of the kitchen garden. We have plantain, violets, dandylions, purslane, clover, wood sorrel.

    • @eternallight7
      @eternallight7 2 года назад +31

      I made dandelion tincture. It’s an excellent liver detox. Nettle soup is very nutritious and makes excellent plant fertiliser for free.

    • @MFaith777
      @MFaith777 2 года назад +8

      We harvest dandelions and roots every spring and fall for medicinal purposes but I’ve always picked them from the garden because I was afraid they would take away from the nutrition of the other plants I’m trying to grow. Have you not found that to be the case?

  • @ThreeRunHomer
    @ThreeRunHomer 2 года назад +429

    Brilliant way to think about weeds. Thanks. I’ve been doing “chop and drop” because I’m lazy, but now I have scientific justification for laziness! 😄

    • @karencski711
      @karencski711 2 года назад +21

      If the weed is small enough, I just do "drop."

    • @richo083
      @richo083 2 года назад +8

      Haha, me too👌

    • @gb9877
      @gb9877 2 года назад +3

      Yep!🤭same here!👍

    • @astrosoup
      @astrosoup Год назад +9

      @@karencski711 Even the big ones I just lay them down as a kind of mulch. Nature will take care of the chopping for me.

    • @gb9877
      @gb9877 Год назад +1

      @@TheManKnownAsJR Haha of course 🤷‍♀️🤣🤣

  • @CD-kg9by
    @CD-kg9by 2 года назад +56

    There also is a misconception in your approach: If you happen to have dandelions in your garden beds, it doesn't mean anything regarding soil health or nutrient balance. Those "pointer plants" only really work in nature. If you see a patch of nettles, you might have dense but rich ground there. A part of my garden, where the woodchips already decayed and where I walk a lot, also is full of dandelions, because the ground is so compacted.
    But in a nutrient rich garden bed, ANY weed will grow with joy. If you have nothing _but_ dandelions, while your tomatoes next to those are rotting away - THEN there would be something wrong with your soil health.

  • @Rikeshsadventures
    @Rikeshsadventures 2 года назад +102

    I discovered by accident that leaving the weeds around the coriander protected them all winter so I had the best crop by spring
    No pests attacked them nor did they die off, somehow the weeds provided something.

    • @markusgorelli5278
      @markusgorelli5278 Год назад +11

      I was reading up a bit about sandalwood. In it's younger years it is parasitic and the roots need to latch on to suitable host plants or it will not grow to maturity. But it got me wondering if there were not equivalent relationships with other plants - maybe not to the extent of parasitism, but maybe the root secretions of certain weeds and absorbed by it's neighbors might make a plant more resistant to pests or grow better. For all we know, plants that need a lot of calcium, might do better with a dandelion growing nearby. 🤔 Or even that the weed might support a particular fungus which secretes certain chemical compounds that are kill nematodes or something.

    • @robynperdieu3434
      @robynperdieu3434 Год назад

      YES!! Weeds are just some brown nozer saying they're undesirable. Dandelion has vitamin C and A, and anticancer properties. They are using dandelion in cancer treatment now. Purslane is a good detox "weed". And though all the eggheads will say pokeweed is poisonous, I made poke wine out of it and I'm obviously not dead.

    • @Kayenne54
      @Kayenne54 Год назад +7

      companion planting may be interesting to you. Also this business of having "clean bare rows" was brought about by "modern" farming methods. Running a harvester over crops, they didn't want additional greenage/non relevant plants mixed in. This is how this mindset grew. In a home garden, whether flowers fruit or vegetables or a mix of everything, the soil doesn't have to be bare. Around the green leafy vegetables grow plants which discourage snails and slugs, but companion planting helps de-mystify what to grow where, or what to use as mulch to protect the lettuce. Personally I never had big issues with the occasional green leafy vegetable being eaten; it meant that that particular plant wasn't healthy to begin with. If you monitor what's going on in your garden, you'll see that the only plants that get decimated by pests are ones that are in the wrong place for them, putting them under stress, or there's a soil imbalance of some kind. Unhealthy conditions result in plants that get pest ridden. Healthy plants may have a bite or two taken out of them but the one right next to the healthy plant which struggled for some reason will be eaten by pests. The exception to this is when there's some kind of generalized locust/grasshopper plague. Which doesn't happen often.

    • @Kayenne54
      @Kayenne54 Год назад +3

      @@markusgorelli5278 You may be interested in Companion Planting. There's quite a few books out there on the topic. Nasturtiums can act as a "trap" plant for white cabbage moth, for example.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Год назад +4

      @@Kayenne54 I find my "companion" plants (like marigolds is another one) just die from the pests. I have had zero success with "companion planting". Though I will say there is a lot to be said for merely ensuring you don't have large patches of bare soil

  • @1voluntaryist
    @1voluntaryist Год назад +58

    I started an organic garden at 13 (1955). I wondered from the start, "Why do we weed?" My father told me it was because the weeds stole nutrients from our food plants and they were good at doing it because they had "home advantage". I was skeptical, but I weeded by tilling. Recently, I learned the scientific argument for letting weeds grow. My mind was changed by Masanobu Fukuoka's "The One Straw Revolution" in 1984. His unique growing methods have the best results, with the least physical work, but require a rare mindset, not easily taught. For example, "weed" is an ignorant value judgement. And that ignorance of growing with nature makes our growing harder. "First, do nothing nature doesn't do." Nature encourages "weeds".

    • @wendylorimer5663
      @wendylorimer5663 Год назад +2

      Another important thing is to avoid using iron/steel tools as it affects the fertility of the soil. I treated myself to bronze tools years ago.

    • @Yorkcityknight
      @Yorkcityknight Год назад +2

      @@wendylorimer5663 Can you explain how that works Wendy? As it wouldn't seem to make any difference to me. Thanks.

    • @Kayenne54
      @Kayenne54 Год назад +7

      I read somewhere that "a weed is simply a plant you don't want growing there". That's the usual human mind set. I got over that very quickly decades ago, mostly because 1. Can't keep up with the weeding 2. I hate to see 'bare" soil. It doesn't happen in nature and domesticated and native plants do very well left to their own devices out in the forests. Quite frankly, sometimes better, because we keep insisting on a certain "order" in our gardens.

    • @annemiura7767
      @annemiura7767 Год назад +2

      This only works In temperate zones, here in the tropics the weeds never die back and just keep growing. I tried Fukuoka’s theory in the 80’s. I have had success with a modified version of allowing grass and smallest weeds to grow and planting very close together.

    • @theyliveinidiocracy6807
      @theyliveinidiocracy6807 Год назад

      @@Kayenne54 Do weed out the poisonous tho..

  • @raytyson1181
    @raytyson1181 Год назад +20

    This is been so obvious to me for so long and I've often tried to explain why I don't weed my garden at all, just slash it all back from time to time. You summarize it well. I'm not a food crop grower tho but a native tree regenerator. My project is long term but the principle is the same. Weeds are good. Any plant is better than nothing. Weeds trap nutrients in their leaves and prevent loss through erosion, and gradually release those nutrients back to the soil as they break down. Roots break down and aerate the soil. Fresh organic matter helps maintain invertebrate and microbial diversity and health, and therefore healthier soil. Having weeds amongst my trees means competition, and therefore slower overall growth, but long term it's overall better and requires less human intervention. Eventually as the trees get bigger and provide more shade and more of their own mulch via leaf drop, weeds a are naturally reduced anyway. This is why I have 'messy' looking garden beds. First the process is started with boosted organic matter in the form of mulch, and from there the sooner the weeds grow through it and stabilise the system the better the overall health of the garden will remain.

  • @rosethorne9155
    @rosethorne9155 2 года назад +39

    I live in California, I do container patio gardening, and I ADORE dandelions! I find that my container-grown roses bloom better when they have dandelions with them in their pots. If the dandelions start to look hungry and scraggly, they tell me when to feed them both before the roses have time to suffer. :)
    Thank you so much for your helpful, educational videos!

    • @magdalenabozyk1798
      @magdalenabozyk1798 Год назад +2

      Dandelions are a poor man's rucola. You can eat the leaves on new plants (in early spring)!
      My mom used to cook syrup with dandelion flowers. She swore on their health attributes and ate two teaspoons every day.

    • @rosethorne9155
      @rosethorne9155 Год назад +1

      @@magdalenabozyk1798 😀 sounds like your mom knows her herbs!
      I like to eat the flowers plain, or with salad. They are mouth puckeringly bitter and I find it very refreshing and tasty. I hear the greens are good too, but I grow them mainly as food for my pets. When I have enough planted and grown, I'm gonna start eating them, myself! 😀

  • @suburbanhomestead
    @suburbanhomestead 2 года назад +208

    I’ve been doing this for at least 7 years now and the soil is much much better. There is the occasional weed seed, etc, but that just means more fertility.

    • @KadenceX
      @KadenceX 2 года назад +6

      Love your videos 😊

    • @meganm4877
      @meganm4877 2 года назад +5

      You and Huw are two of my favourite gardener RUclipsrs : )

    • @LB-vl3qn
      @LB-vl3qn 2 года назад +4

      Fancy running into you here. Good to see you 😊 ~ Lisa

    • @vodkaboy
      @vodkaboy Год назад

      doesn't make sense. spreading confusion, and still dependant on conventional food production. l'enfer est pavé de bonnes intentions.

  • @tobiasrall1110
    @tobiasrall1110 2 года назад +147

    A very nice approach that emphasizes the importance of soil ecology!!!
    I would like to add one more extreme important correlation between plants and soil microorganisms, which changed my perspective on gardening completly! Plants excrete root exsudates which contain carbohydrates to attract beneficial bacteria and fungi, which support the plants with nutrients in return. Therefore, special microbiomes develop around plant roots in the rhizosphere, dependent on the nutitional needs of the plant. This works similar to the mikrobiomes in our intestines. The connection between plant and soil is therefore not one-sided, the plant is actually feeding and building up soil and doesn't simply deprive it from nutrients, same applies to weeds.
    Thats why soil covered with living plants is much healthier and more fertile and gardeners should always keep their soil well covered!

    • @helentc
      @helentc 2 года назад +23

      Very cool. Plants are already in a harmonious relationship with the soil. We're the ones who have to catch up. :)

    • @growingwithfungi
      @growingwithfungi 2 года назад +2

      👌 that's my understanding too. 😁 thank you so much 😁🌱💚🙏✨

    • @fazeinhaze2687
      @fazeinhaze2687 2 года назад +8

      Absolutely!
      Weed cover for land is analogous to skin for human.
      Weed/skin protects land/human from invasion of foreign objects. Weed/skin senses and responds to the environment. Furthermore, our skin is covered with microorganisms which is crucial for healthy skin and immune system. So is the symbiosis of weed- microorganism to the land.

    • @Mondelfe
      @Mondelfe 2 года назад

      Yeah well, if the skin and cover let‘s anything else grow there. Which is not the case after a few weeks. Weeds grow faster and bigger than salad or peas. There will be no room and not enough sunlight left for your legumes and fruit and they will disappear, some of them more slowly, some very quickly. I love dandelion and greedy but they won’t let anything else grow. Greedy above all because of the roots. They are a net, they go deeply into the soil, they are everywhere. If you leave one centimeter of root in the soil it will
      grow out in a week again. It displaces even grass.

    • @fazeinhaze2687
      @fazeinhaze2687 Год назад +2

      @@Mondelfe That is true. But it is important to save as much land as possible for weeds.

  • @fazeinhaze2687
    @fazeinhaze2687 2 года назад +30

    I let weeds grow on my land except the patches on which I grow vegetables and flowers. Then I cut the weeds, leaving the clippings where they are. The repeat of grow-cut cycle provides the main source of the organic matters for my sandy land. Weeds are the major producers in this sense.
    Also, it is very interesting to observe what nature presents at different times of the year or on different weather conditions. Some plants only pop up after flood then disappear quickly when soil dries.
    Enjoy nature's diversity. Uniformity is boring.

  • @ecocentrichomestead6783
    @ecocentrichomestead6783 2 года назад +79

    I used to refer to weeding as "collecting compost materials" but now I feed them to the hens.
    I let weeds get big enough to easily grab with my hand because:
    1. Weeds capture nutrients that would otherwise be leached away.
    2. I can do two things at once. Collect hens feed and restrict wild growth!

    • @iahelcathartesaura3887
      @iahelcathartesaura3887 2 года назад +3

      I love the way you think! Yes indeed! 🙂👍❤️
      And this is the mindset of the keeping the circle of sustainability & permaculture completed. (Which is always a good thing if people do it with knowlege vs careless assumptions.)

    • @meoff7602
      @meoff7602 2 года назад +3

      Yeah, my coop is covered with dead weeds my flock doesn't eat.

    • @ecocentrichomestead6783
      @ecocentrichomestead6783 2 года назад +3

      @@meoff7602 oh they don't eat everything. When I throw in a batch I say "See what you can find tasty in that!"

    • @meoff7602
      @meoff7602 2 года назад +3

      @@ecocentrichomestead6783 Whatever they don't eat just dry outs. Helps grab the massive amount of poop they leave behind.
      Saves me money. I got alot local predators. I'm right on front of a huge forest. So they don't get to free roam. Got to keep em in a fence or they will be lunch. So I've come up several tactics to keep it clean. Including a insanely large grazing area that they can't completely work to dirt.

  • @kenyonbissett3512
    @kenyonbissett3512 2 года назад +98

    I remember reading an article almost a decade ago talking about weeds as an indicator of soil needs. Dandelion is calcium, dock is potassium, etc. comfrey is a great accumulator. Bocking 14 could be planted as an all around chop and drop as well as a liquid fertilizer. It would be great for someone to make a simple list that all gardeners could keep posted for quick reference to know what is lacking for a quick application of the needed element.

    • @marchmello1528
      @marchmello1528 2 года назад +3

      Thank you

    • @jmasters1905
      @jmasters1905 2 года назад +6

      I recently came across a clip using banana peels to provide potassium, but this is not, as the ones you mentioned above, a living plant.

    • @oztrich24
      @oztrich24 2 года назад +5

      @@jmasters1905 I made a banana tea with the peels and fertilize my roses with it. You can bland them up, too. I'm just too lazy to do that.😊

    • @AntonGully
      @AntonGully 2 года назад +21

      That doesn't seem right. A dandelion doesn't appear because there's a calcium imbalance, it appears because there's an opportunistic dandelion seed. That seed will grow whether there's a calcium imbalance or not. Charitably, let's say that the calcium deficit causes a space where the dandelion can grow absent less hardy plants, except that's not the case here because there's plenty of space because these are deliberately planted flowers and crops, artificially spaced out already. Perhaps in an organic environment it might be true - a dandelion exploiting a low-calcium area that has had the other plant life die off, but for a garden that's rarely going to be the case.
      Whole thing seems a bit New Age-y.
      100% on board with chop and drop though.

    • @sylviaroberts8103
      @sylviaroberts8103 2 года назад +2

      @@AntonGully Well, you’ve convinced me Anton.😀

  • @pattyharris1962
    @pattyharris1962 Год назад +6

    I'm so glad I came across your video because in my new house x 1 year, the weeds and dandelions are plentiful. I weeded last year and felt it in my hands ✋️ 😪 for days. I am going to try some of the ground covers mentioned in the comments. I swore I was not going to start gardening again but it is just not possible! I derive so much pleasure not only from my labor, but I just love ❤️ to be on my patio all day and sometimes into the night basking in the happiness it brings me. Very spiritual 🙏 experience.

  • @SwaveWorm
    @SwaveWorm 2 года назад +8

    I acquired a parcel of land that was backfilled with river sand and clay. This layers are about a foot deep in some places. It would be back breaking to till it and might actually be detrimental to plants if I did try to mix it. So, instead, I took native weeds from the surrounding areas and let them grow so that these plants would move nutrients to the surface. I chopped and dropped them which added more organic matter on my top soil along with the minerals and nutrients that the weeds “mined”. It has been almost a year now and there are obvious improvements. There’s more life under the weeds and more loam, not to mention the presence of worm castings.

  • @brandonboulton2776
    @brandonboulton2776 2 года назад +4

    I have one compost pile connected to the chicken run. They add to it, turn it and pick out the seeds and stems...🤪 I amend the compost with everything but the kitchen sink, activated charcoal from my smoker, ash from my fireplace, seaweed from the sound, swamp water. My soil is Soo alive it practically speaks back. Rich living soil takes time, but the RETURNS!

  • @annadawson5179
    @annadawson5179 2 года назад +86

    This is something that's been on my mind heavily this year, after finding out the hay I'd used for mulching and composting was tainted with aminopyralid. A hundred gallons of compost ready to use had to be dumped, the pile that was in process abandoned, and all the mulching hay pulled up. Having to start a new compost pile, I've developed a new appreciation for the weeds in the yard as readily available clean biomass, and for the first time, there aren't enough weeds!

    • @gaeangardensbyizabela
      @gaeangardensbyizabela 2 года назад +7

      Wow, thank you for this comment, I used hay to mulch this year, I'm sure they used chemicals on it and haven't thought of it

    • @benfeldman8361
      @benfeldman8361 2 года назад +3

      Same thing happened to me with the hay!

    • @oztrich24
      @oztrich24 2 года назад +5

      @@gaeangardensbyizabela You'll know it if the hay has been treated with aminopyralid (GrazeOn). All your plants will look like they have "curly top" virus and soon die. Except for grass crops like wheat, hay and corn. They're unaffected by this persistent herbicide. That's why it's used on these crops. Aminopyralid goes straight through a grazing animals digestive system, so check any manure you get to see what/where the animal was eating. This stuff should be illegal and it IS illegal in other countries. Wonder why that is?$$$? 🤔 It takes a lot of (7+) years and money to fix the soil to be veggie grow-able again.

    • @theobserver9131
      @theobserver9131 Год назад +1

      I think straw is a better mulch anyway.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Год назад +1

      Wow, I'm sorry you lost all of that!

  • @Auriflamme
    @Auriflamme 2 года назад +5

    I've always said that a weed is just a misunderstood wild plant. Sometimes to the point of slander. Just because we haven't domesticated it doesn't mean it has nothing to offer us. Thumbs up!

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

  • @acebilbo
    @acebilbo 2 года назад +47

    Been following a guy who eats weeds because nutritionally, a lot of weeds are better than the greens we usually eat. So I have a raised bed or two mixed into my wild back acre. Nature figures out where to grow my dandelions, dock, nettle, mallow, wild lettuce, plantain, heal-all, etc. Mixing the wild and the

    • @davidsarahmccolm
      @davidsarahmccolm 2 года назад +7

      Could you give a link? Thanks!

    • @gathercreatelivewithleslie8340
      @gathercreatelivewithleslie8340 2 года назад +4

      Would love to know the channel also. I hunt wild edibles and medicinals and always enjoy a new channel.

    • @acebilbo
      @acebilbo 2 года назад +3

      @@davidsarahmccolm Sergei Bouchenko from southern Oregon. He has wildcrafting books and cooking books with his Mother. He is really interesting to listen to and has a great story of how his family got into eating "weeds". Air quotes always.

    • @oztrich24
      @oztrich24 2 года назад +3

      "Heal all"?? Piqued my interest. What plant is that?

    • @christineedwards4865
      @christineedwards4865 Год назад +2

      @oztrich24 Probably prunella vulgaris, but there are some other plants that can go by that name, like glechoma hederacea.

  • @iahelcathartesaura3887
    @iahelcathartesaura3887 2 года назад +9

    Absolutely. As a child, I somehow knew this. I've enjoyed seeing my instinct confirmed throughout life. I somehow knew I wasn't just crazy or childish lol!

    • @PF-gi9vv
      @PF-gi9vv Год назад

      I too as a child used to wonder if we could eat all of these weeds in the garden, but I didn't think there are also poisonous weeds such as hogweed that will kill us too.

  • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
    @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Год назад +4

    Hi, I'm back! About 6 months ago I was inspired to start my first garden. I think this is the most influential gardening video I've ever watched. I just has absolutely nl idea about this concept. I basically used to pull every weed of every size by hand (impossible, takes hours a day) and leave them on the roadside, exposing bare ground and not even mulching. THANK YOU FOR STOPPING ME!

  • @gabyroldan8151
    @gabyroldan8151 2 года назад +25

    I chop and drop everything thanks to one of your videos a long time ago. Extreme Texas summers bake the soil, so as I pull out weeds, grass, plants that are done for the season I make a “salad” and spread all over. Thank You for all you do! I very much appreciate your new format, very encouraging for those of us with limited gardening budgets 🥰

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

  • @SpencerHHO
    @SpencerHHO Год назад +3

    I live on a beach and my yard is like 90% sand, most weeds make me happy because it stops sand blowing around and allows rain to penetrate deeper. Most also provide early and year round flowers for pollinators they also reduce pest loads. I control and kill some weeds. Thistle can take over and choke out other plants and it's a literal pain so I kill those but everything else is allowed to stay. I was considering killing back the wandering few as it can be bad for dog skin but my pups aren't bothered by it and it helps keep the soil hydrated and provide a habitat for native frogs.

  • @charlesbeehner5378
    @charlesbeehner5378 Год назад +3

    I too have discovered the " joy of weeding" and have been spreading countless little slow-release organic amendments on the surface of my garden ever since. I usually roll the weeds in my hands like I am trying to warm my hands up. This usually crushes the weeds and damages them enough so that a few hours in the sun will kill them.

  • @dennisstevens8031
    @dennisstevens8031 2 года назад +8

    Hello, my son and I breed tropical fish. That requires frequent water changes so I use the nutrient rich water to water pot plants and my bonsai with good results. I enjoyed your video and have long considered “weeds”as beneficent in the garden. A long time ago I visited a professional dahlia grower who used weeds to help keep evaporation down and to draw down insect pests from his flower’s. regularly he would hoe down the weeds and leave them as they fell to continue their work in the rows of dahlias, he had magnificent plants.

  • @bryanheath8138
    @bryanheath8138 Год назад +2

    "Weeds are nature's way of rebalancing the soil health"
    So true!

  • @brightscales197
    @brightscales197 Год назад +5

    I like to call weeds 'surprise plants'. A lot of them have great flowers for the bees in my garden, and usually I pull only the ones that crowd my veggie beds or cover my stepping stones. I usually drop them back somewhere or throw them in the compost. But the tea is an interesting idea.

    • @BronzeTheSling
      @BronzeTheSling Год назад +1

      "Suprise plants", I love it. Happy little accident plants?

  • @blackmber
    @blackmber 2 года назад +13

    I recently learned that a prolific weed in my garden is a relative of alfalfa and clover, and fixes nitrogen. It’s called black medic. While pulling them out I had seen many nodules on the roots, which I thought were from bugs or disease. In fact they are a sign that the plant is collecting plenty of nitrogen from the air. I think I’ll let them grow as a ground cover until they start to flower, then harvest all that nitrogen rich foliage to amend the soil.

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 2 года назад +2

      Thanks! I'm going to Google that and see if it's in my area.

    • @blackmber
      @blackmber 2 года назад +2

      @@mosart7025 If you have clover, alfalfa, wild liquorice, or any legume in your garden it can do the same thing. Some are invasive controlled weeds in certain areas so check your local lists

  • @DavincisGirl66
    @DavincisGirl66 2 года назад +3

    Your production is so sophisticated it is better than many tv shows. Very visually interesting to pop around your garden as we learn.

  • @youtuudodo
    @youtuudodo 2 года назад +42

    Just my observation, if you have dandelions(deep tap root weed) try not to pull it out. Cut it almost to soil level leaving the root in the ground, the roots will continue to pull moisture from the ground and keep the area around it moist for a few days. Plant seeds around or near the the root and it will be kept moist for some time.

    • @garthwunsch
      @garthwunsch 2 года назад +9

      This is what Dr. Ingham teaches. Ever since taking her course, I seldom pull a weed. If it must come out, it just gets cut at soil level and the top growth is utilized in whatever way appropriate, while the root stays in the soil as a home for microbial life, but perhaps more important is that the carbon stays in the soil, not released into the atmosphere… my small part in carbon sequestration.

    • @thistime3889
      @thistime3889 2 года назад +10

      @@garthwunsch Doesn't the plant regrow? Dandelions for example are capable of doing that, as I heard. So it wouldn't decompose and microbes may also remain the same. In this case you could just leave the top aswell...

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

    • @simonesmit6708
      @simonesmit6708 2 года назад +1

      But I like dandelion root tea.

    • @mikeharrington5593
      @mikeharrington5593 2 года назад +1

      A downside might be the root is still robbing nutrients from below your sowing, & the resurgent leaf growth may smother the seedlings?

  • @joanweightman2275
    @joanweightman2275 2 года назад +15

    Makes sense! My dad only ever hoed the weeds whilst young so they immediately put the nutrient back. I don't recall him buying compost either or even having a compost bin and he got good produce. Mostly I remember every plant went into ground not planters or pots, after being raised on the kitchen windowsills or tiny greenhouse. The garden got manure and blood fish n bone meal as extra feed. he produced good stuff. What do you do for such as ground elder and buttercups though?? Will you do a vlog about that? Please don't suggest cardboard, it doesn't work.

  • @melaniesanderson3637
    @melaniesanderson3637 2 года назад +2

    I love that here in west Texas, all the weeds help mulch the vegetables. I lay them on top of seeds to keep the moisture and appreciate all that weeds do for the garden. Some are edible too.

  • @gardengirl2420
    @gardengirl2420 2 года назад +1

    A garden center employee called weeds ‘POOP’. Plants Out Of Place. I always remember that when I’m weeding

  • @moiragoldsmith7052
    @moiragoldsmith7052 2 года назад +2

    Hallelujah Huw! Mother Nature is going to love you even more. And, there are so many weeds that are beneficial to put amongst our salads for lunch. 💞

  • @williamday3521
    @williamday3521 Год назад +3

    Great to hear someone else saying what i'm thinking. I have for a while seen weeding as harvesting. But i don't return it immediately back to the garden. i feed it to my chickens, then compost goes back into the garden. I've been gardening in hard clay, the rapid transformation in the soil from permaculture techniques is astonishing!

  • @ohiogardener4019
    @ohiogardener4019 2 года назад +4

    My beds don't have many weeds due to the many years of no dig gardening, but I use Comfrey leaves mulch to help replace some of the nutrients lost by harvesting vegetables from the beds.

  • @pollyjazz
    @pollyjazz 2 года назад +44

    Love the weed tea idea! 💕 I thought you could do this with just specific weeds like nettles. Being able to use everything so everything can go back in the soil makes a lot of sense!

    • @truepeace3
      @truepeace3 2 года назад +10

      If you make weed tea, make sure you include the roots of the weeds.

    • @ATinyPillow
      @ATinyPillow 2 года назад +8

      Any vegetation will work, from weeds to grass.
      .

    • @iahelcathartesaura3887
      @iahelcathartesaura3887 2 года назад

      Yes! I just started making the FSW (fetid swamp water) as described by David The Good and others (Asian & other traditional gardners). Am using weeds, various grass clippings, raw kitchen & garden scraps, some good soil to inoculate it. It's amazing!
      I avoid any vegetation etc which may carry serious toxins (poison ivy (urushiol), bad chemical additives, mushrooms I dont def know are safe, any poisonous slugs etc) or other things I would not want my food plants to up take up. I get serious reactions to toxins, so don't want to consume that.

    • @davidflash603
      @davidflash603 2 года назад +1

      How do i measure the nutrients from weeds that travel into the water from sun tea?

    • @trumpetingangel
      @trumpetingangel 9 месяцев назад

      @@davidflash603 Talk to a lab that does comprehensive soil testing, like Logan Labs, and see if they can test it for you.

  • @StephenSmith-ge1qf
    @StephenSmith-ge1qf 2 года назад +8

    I compost the really invasive rhizomatous weeds and chop and drop practically everything else. I also am lucky to have a decent wild area which I scythe once a year and use the hay as ground cover over winter. The soil here has gone from thin acid sand 8 years ago to very productive rich land now. Might not be tidy, but the results speak for themselves.

  • @Mojocinco
    @Mojocinco 2 года назад +12

    Great video. I’ve learned that tilling and disturbing the soil interrupts the mushroom network and brings nutrients to the surface to be burned by the sun. So in 9a we have much better crops in a no till garden. I agree that weeds are beneficial.

    • @nunyabiznis817
      @nunyabiznis817 Год назад +2

      I found out the hard way in 2018 that not tilling a garden means you allow pupa of pests to overwinter, meaning you bread them. And ones you breed them, you do so year after year. After much research and thinking back to things I saw in previous years, I was actually eating tiny maggots and I suspect many no-till and "organic" gardeners are doing the same without knowing it. Tilling in autumn and early spring is a must now. There's a reason why farmers till - they know what they are doing. Tilling alone does not completely eliminate pests that pupate in the ground, but not tilling breeds them without a doubt. Tilling down to 5 or 6 inches does not disrupt mycorrhizae that much and it a necessary task for pest management.

  • @ronnyvbk
    @ronnyvbk 2 года назад +11

    Since last year I m no longer mowing my grass, I m harvesting mulch and compost feed. Since this year I m also harvesting grass clippings. Rather then covering my garden paths with wood chips or fabric, they are now surplus organic matter I harvest with my mower. All organic matter is useful. The difference between a weed and a herb is a weed is a herb you don't know either the name or the use for :-)

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Год назад +1

      A herb is edible

    • @ronnyvbk
      @ronnyvbk Год назад

      @@Stettafire Exactly my point :-), many so called weeds are perfectly edible, nettles for example in soup or mashed potatoes.

  • @simonemeyer6416
    @simonemeyer6416 2 года назад +17

    I like your videos, very inspirational and my favourite gardening channel.
    There should be a warning with the chop and drop though... only do it in dry weather! I'd come across this method a few years ago and started enthusiastically chopping and dropping, only to realise that the plant pieces, I think it was rosebay willowherb, had rooted after some wet days.

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Год назад

      I wouldn't trust dandelions, buttercups or couchgrass either. Once dried and dead they don't selfplant.

  • @jellyfish206
    @jellyfish206 2 года назад +2

    Btw, I saw dandelion flowers, you can dry and use it like a tea. If you don't know that

  • @mandyconnecteddogs
    @mandyconnecteddogs 2 года назад +9

    I could just jump for joy when I see videos like this. weeds can take over, but are so so useful and misunderstood, they are plants with uses.... medicinal, edible, insect repelling, and also bring nutrients to the soil. it's vital to encourage permaculture practice, it has worked for nature for ever. however, some weeds are lethal to plants, so just be controlled.... pull, chop and use for worm bins is my favorite. dandelions are a mini pharmacy plant. when I plant seeds direct, I have much better growth within weeds. I have also protected many veggies using herbs and weeds. it's just a mindset that things should look one way.....

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 2 года назад +2

      I bought an old book to use the illustrations in art projects. When I started looking at it I realized that it's all about harvestable "weeds/plants" that people used to use years ago for all kinds of things. I'm going to keep it!

    • @mandyconnecteddogs
      @mandyconnecteddogs 2 года назад

      @@mosart7025 that is so cool

  • @jcgirl3
    @jcgirl3 Месяц назад

    This is no coincidence. I was just weeding my garden and thought: "Why don't I just leave the pulled out weeds on the soil, it's the same as chop and drop.' And now you confirm it. Great!

  • @purposefulpermaculture541
    @purposefulpermaculture541 2 года назад +1

    A great example of the permaculture principle 'the problem is the solution' ie the 'problem' teaches us! I leave dandelions to flower wherever they're not in the way as their nectar is super concentrated in sugars and especially valuable in spring for early bees. I also eat many 'weeds' and other perennials such as nettles - so much easier than raising from seed!

  • @YalisCommunity
    @YalisCommunity 2 года назад

    Weeds are such a blessing and the more we learn about them the more majestically wonderful they become!

  • @lastharvest4044
    @lastharvest4044 2 года назад +11

    Great video. I've been doing this, and honestly at this point I love weeds for their incredibly vigorous growth. It's more labor intensive, but costs nothing and they come back every year. It's really not more work than compost anyway when you think about it.

  • @TheRosangela9369
    @TheRosangela9369 2 года назад +1

    Looking behind the curtain...brilliant- Harvesting nutrients is putting fun into a boring work. Change your mind and your world will change. I named weeding my kind of yoga, blackberry yoga, nettle yoga...slow and mindful moves.

  • @Annie.xx-xx
    @Annie.xx-xx 2 года назад +7

    I’m so glad I decided to let a lot of weeds grow for their flowers this year . I had no idea they can positively affect the soil . Great video huw . Thank you

  • @crisfellows1978
    @crisfellows1978 2 года назад +2

    "I think we can all agree..." regarding dandelion and nettle which I planted, on purpose, and eat and use medicinally. Thistles I haven't tried juicing and putting into soup yet, but I will. In the meantime it is the bulk of the new compost bed.

  • @johnmcbrosel4840
    @johnmcbrosel4840 2 года назад +42

    I remember one particular year, when my parents lawn was absolutely swamped with dandelion. The years before and after there were just a few of them, but in this year everything turned yellow. I always wondered what caused that invasion. What you're describing makes sense and it seems like a reasonable explanation to me. Thanks for solving this 10 year old puzzle for me ✌️

    • @ScrogginHausen
      @ScrogginHausen 2 года назад +10

      Pop the flowers off of those dandelions and make jam, it's delicious.

    • @robynperdieu3434
      @robynperdieu3434 2 года назад +7

      You can eat the root, flowers and leaves. Very nutritional with vitamin c, a, and minerals. Good cancer fighter and kidney aid.

    • @iahelcathartesaura3887
      @iahelcathartesaura3887 2 года назад +5

      @@robynperdieu3434 (yes depending on your kidney situation. It can be very bad for people with certain kidney problems and good for people with others :)

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 2 года назад +2

      As an artist I want to experiment with making some kind of yellow paint or coloring from dandelions. Maybe I can make it edible?

    • @juanitaglenn9042
      @juanitaglenn9042 2 года назад +2

      @@ScrogginHausen Do you have a recipe? I would love to try it! We are having a huge dandelion year this year, so I can experiment til my heart's content🙂

  • @MermieOriginals
    @MermieOriginals 2 года назад +13

    I've recently had the instinctive understanding that the best fertilizer for a particular plant (and tree) is it's own leaves and flowers...perhaps why in the wild things proliferate with abundance without any intervention^^ So rhubarb leaves under the rhubarb yesterday (keeps moisture in and helps stop weeds too!)

    • @meoff7602
      @meoff7602 2 года назад +1

      Nope, the plants we eat are highly mutated from the original nature stock through selective breeding. High food yields require a human to add more nutrients than there would otherwise be there.

    • @MermieOriginals
      @MermieOriginals 2 года назад +1

      @@meoff7602 I agree when it comes to certain things but I meant those plants which naturally proliferate and heirloom varieties. I've been mulching my geraniums with their own flowers and they have since bloomed incredibly all year round (in a covered space) without having added any 'fertilizer'. It's partly to do with the consciousness of the plants too. If you want more leaves add the leaves, more flowers add the flowers and simply say to the plant 'there you go' make more...whatever :)

  • @jelleesi
    @jelleesi Год назад +2

    I've been doing this from day one but I already understood this concept because I'm a biology major... I always return to the garden what doesn't get used... I also started the raised beds in layers... I collected leaf shed which I used as a compost layer and then shifted dirt and then manure/kitchen compost... that way the beds are composting naturally... they produce a lot of heat which has helped to promote warm temp crops to germinate faster... then I let it go in the winter and just turn over the weed top to compost downward... the soil fungus looked fantastic when I turned over for this year... so the beds are definitely composting... I also throw my flowering plants in once they start to dye back...

  • @geodude9403
    @geodude9403 2 года назад

    This is exactly my mentality. Any greenery is a free resource

  • @jcarrington6890
    @jcarrington6890 2 года назад

    I've been doing this with green alkanet and it's amazing where last year's chop and drop went. Definitely will continue to do it.

  • @beverleymellor
    @beverleymellor 2 года назад

    Brilliant information thanks so much Huw 🙏🏻

  • @davidthescottishvegan
    @davidthescottishvegan 2 года назад

    Thanks for this video. I have a lot of Docks in my allotment so I definitely will be using the leaves as a plant feed or put into the compost heap.

  • @priayief
    @priayief Год назад +1

    I have been trying for years to understand why "brewing" various kinds of plants is worth the effort. I can use these plants as a mulch or I can combine them in my compost bins, skipping this brewing step and I believe I can accomplish the same thing.

  • @sadietaylor37
    @sadietaylor37 2 года назад +1

    I really enjoy your videos. I appreciate how you get to the point very quickly, great info, and lovely filming. Thank you!

  • @lizzardbreath2372
    @lizzardbreath2372 2 года назад

    Thank you! This is the kind of gardening video I look for.

  • @Bigfoottehchipmunk
    @Bigfoottehchipmunk 2 года назад +1

    I process weeds through the chicken yard, and then most of that, minus the ubiquitous wild morning glories, goes into the compost pile or sometimes to use as mulch.
    I leave purslane as a ground cover.

  • @janeb7633
    @janeb7633 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing, great way to look at maintaining the garden.

  • @bill-2018
    @bill-2018 Год назад +1

    I pack plants together more than the recommended spacing to stop sunlight drying the soil out, the leaves provide shade.
    I also sprinkle crushed eggshells onto my garden.
    When they had a sycamore tree next door I'd collect the leaves and compost them and put them on my garden. I compost weeds.

  • @manuela2671
    @manuela2671 2 года назад +6

    This is so great! To now have a reasonable explanation for why its good to do it that way. Learning from nature, who knows best 🌱💚

  • @haerthguard
    @haerthguard 2 года назад +8

    Great stuff Huw. This has great timing, as I have been considering this kind of approach myself lately. I have never heard of the Law of Return, but it makes perfect sense to me.

  • @michaelmcclafferty3346
    @michaelmcclafferty3346 2 года назад

    A very informative video Huw. Thanks very much.

  • @mamazeeto623
    @mamazeeto623 2 года назад

    Fabulous yet again ! Thank you for your wonderful insights that work in harmony with Mother Nature 🙏🏼

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke 2 года назад

    Valuable tips. THANK you!!

  • @jellyfish206
    @jellyfish206 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience

  • @naomitrue5614
    @naomitrue5614 2 года назад +2

    I love chop and drop. For the weeds in my yard, I don't even pull them, I just cut them down to ground level with the week whacker. The roots nourish the soil life and the rest becomes mulch. I'm in the low desert with a yard of bare silty dirt so this works well to nourish the ground until I move back up north, hopefully soon! Hew, you always knock it out of the park with your creative approaches!! When I get up north, all my weeds will go into liquid fertilizer! Thanks!

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

  • @kristinaginorio1344
    @kristinaginorio1344 2 года назад

    So well explained. Thank you.

  • @holisticheritagehomestead
    @holisticheritagehomestead 2 года назад

    What a great video. “Nutrient harvesting”. So many good points here. Thank you.

  • @lucylu530
    @lucylu530 2 года назад

    I've been doing that for a while. It's so easy and good for the soil.

  • @erroleabrown4317
    @erroleabrown4317 2 года назад +1

    That really is a good garden secret to know, fantastic tip and knowledge worth passing on, thanks so much I to don’t like weeding but now I have a much better way of looking at it, thanks for sharing such handy advice

  • @resi2120
    @resi2120 2 года назад +2

    I can't tell you how much I love your content 💕 Love it!

    • @HuwRichards
      @HuwRichards  2 года назад +1

      Thank you so much! That means a lot :)

  • @AmericanaGardens
    @AmericanaGardens 2 года назад

    Very informative! Thank you!

  • @CilVine
    @CilVine 2 года назад

    Have been doing this for years. Nice of you to bring this up, though. Really hope more people begin to understand this.

  • @ChrissyWeasley1
    @ChrissyWeasley1 2 года назад

    this is such good news!!! love it! 😍

  • @anniesu2670
    @anniesu2670 2 года назад

    Peace Huw
    Very helpful and interesting, I can't thank you enough for your sharing knowledge with us

  • @emilytsialos5358
    @emilytsialos5358 2 года назад +2

    This is just such wonderful information for anyone who gardens on a very tight budget (that would be me!), and your gardens are just so lovely and inspiring. Thank you!

  • @galactickim
    @galactickim Год назад

    Awesome video, thank you. Love this approach to weeds!

  • @timoloef
    @timoloef Год назад

    I feel it's a blessing if you can see that everything in nature has value, is a gift

  • @funkarola
    @funkarola 2 года назад

    Dock! Finally thanks so much for this! We've got loads and I hate pulling anything out because I know everything has a purpose!

  • @maryellenbunce7751
    @maryellenbunce7751 2 года назад

    🤯blowing my mind. Such great insight and information

  • @SarahWilliams-oo6zg
    @SarahWilliams-oo6zg 2 года назад +1

    Robin Wall Kimmerer’s book Braiding Sweetgrass is a great resource about plants and how Native Americans always gave back to the plant they took from.
    She is also featured on a pod cast On Being with Krista Tippet.
    I always enjoy your channel.

  • @noahsschleifer
    @noahsschleifer 2 года назад

    Wow! Thanks for this

  • @sassyknitter5418
    @sassyknitter5418 2 года назад +2

    This is right up the Nigel Palmer philosophy as well. Harvest your weeds, make shelf stable extractions, return the nutrients right back to the plant and soil. And I'm totally going to try isolating and soaking my weeks with a touch of leaf mold as you suggest over the top as my yard of clay produces may a weed. I really like knowing that the weeds aren't weeds, but nutrition that is waiting to be harvested. Simply fantastic. Thank you Huw :)

  • @andohervatin3586
    @andohervatin3586 Год назад +1

    Love this rephrasing . You've changed my perspective forever. Thankyou

  • @EricWhiteChooseGod1st
    @EricWhiteChooseGod1st 2 года назад

    Fantastic video. Thank you.

  • @Joronobon
    @Joronobon 2 года назад

    Great vid, guys. Fab content and beautifully shot 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻

  • @reg4211
    @reg4211 2 года назад

    Fantastic vid. Ty.

  • @timenslow7520
    @timenslow7520 2 года назад +4

    Great to hear I'm not alone on this! I started researching them to find out if any of the weeds are good companion plants, and removing others for my mulch pile. So far I've come across several weeds that I now incorporate into my garden design to aid with pests and promote beneficials. Definitely seen a jump on soil fertility and good insect boom.

  • @stoicepictetus833
    @stoicepictetus833 2 года назад

    Loved this, Hugh. Thank you very much! 😀

  • @stevendowden2579
    @stevendowden2579 2 года назад

    great video huw

  • @u81wheresmine46
    @u81wheresmine46 2 года назад +2

    I covered my garden soil in grass clippings this is first year doing it I am amazed at the difference I have seen already compared to years past with bare soil

  • @sparkywatts3072
    @sparkywatts3072 Год назад

    Thank you so much. I will be making a lot of changes soon in my garden. You have inspired me.

  • @deadfamous8503
    @deadfamous8503 2 года назад

    Thank you so much for the tips I keep cutting Brambles back for the stick insects and now when I weed the gravel I will chop and drop thank you again

  • @tinkeringinthailand8147
    @tinkeringinthailand8147 2 года назад

    Interesting stuff Huw.

  • @humminbirdhoopz8231
    @humminbirdhoopz8231 2 года назад +11

    I am experimenting this s year with the concept of weed soak. I am actually replenishing nutrients with weed fertilizer on all crops and even in spaces where I don't currently grow. The theory is like you say - keeping a balance of what the soils call for. Also, I hope to save on purchasing commercial fertilizers.

    • @stardust2531
      @stardust2531 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/hyT-6qiubd0/видео.html

  • @mandandi
    @mandandi 2 года назад

    Excellent video. I keep all my weeds during the rainy season and use them as mulch and liquid fertilizer for my garden and fruit trees. Of course, I do remove some to keep the overall scale tipped towards keeping more of my food. But I drop them in the garden beds.

  • @Blaowzir
    @Blaowzir 2 года назад +3

    totally agree with this, weeding out feels like taking the future nutrients from the soil