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Eradicate Those Weeds

f IT is a difficult matter to keep '• the garden free of weeds at 0 this season. We sometimes find, j : in an otherwise well-kept garden, a f patch of weeds allowed to flower and a scatter myriads of seeds for and near, s and this means crops of weeds for years to come. A prolific Bpot for the distri- a bution of wood seeds is ♦ the rubbish g heap. One thistle plant may distribute c its thousands of feathery seeds on land f scorcs of yards away, and so may the e Cape weed, dandelion and other free i seeding plants. a

_ duckweed, "fat hen" and some of tlie grasses flower and seed when the plants are quite small, and may be lost sight of amongst thd' stronger growth kinds. Weeds not only take food and moisture from the rightful tenants of the soil, but they serve us harbour for slugs and other garden pests. They do little harm if they are dug in before they are allowed to seed; in faet, they do some good, for they .act as green manure, and tend to keep the soil open. The unthinking gardener sometimes allows the weeds to remain on the ground as a shade to it, and to retard evaporation from otherwise bare spots, forgetting that the pores of the leaves exhale more moisture than the soil. It is better to dispose of the weeds just as they are peeping through the soil.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19400120.2.204

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 17, 20 January 1940, Page 9 (Supplement)

Word Count
247

Eradicate Those Weeds Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 17, 20 January 1940, Page 9 (Supplement)

Eradicate Those Weeds Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 17, 20 January 1940, Page 9 (Supplement)