Perennial sow thistle experiment

General tips / questions on seeding & planting

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Jenny Green
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Location: East Midlands

I've finally found time to post about an experiment I undertook over a year ago. I had been plagued by perennial sow thistle on my allotment for several years. For those of you who don't know what this is, it's a creeping, thistle like plant that seems to love cultivated land. It comes up in late spring and seems innocuous enough at first, but soon it's everywhere, taking light, water and nutrients from your crop. Then come winter, the ground is thick with its brittle, spaghetti like roots. It's easy enough to pull up, but you can never get rid of it.
So, about this time two years ago, before the sow thistle showed its head in spring, I sowed the ground with mustard. This was to feed the soil. About the time the mustard started to flower, up came the sow thistle. I then covered the lot with 1000 gauge black plastic. The plastic stayed on until late autumn and all the surrounding ground was cultivated. Any sow thistle peeping out from under the plastic was pulled out. Then I took plastic up to let the winter rain in.
Unfortunately around Feb last year my husband got Legionnaire's disease and I was unable to get on the plot for six weeks solid. Given that I could only ever spare one afternoon a week for it I felt I wouldn't be able to keep on top of it that year so gave it up. I did, however, go back to see if the sow thistle had reappeared at all and took some photos. There was no sign of it whatsoever, and no live roots in the soil that I could see.
Hopefully, I can post the photos below.
While I understand this probably wouldn't be a viable method for a commercial grower as it entails leaving ground uncultivated for a growing season, it does show that it is possible to eradicate some of the weeds that plague us. I would like to stress, however, that thick plastic is needed for this, and that the weed cannot be allowed to sustain itself from roots attached to plants growing outside of the plastic.Image
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Phew - finally wrote this post! :D
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pigletwillie
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I dont have sow thistle Jenny but thats a nice looking plot. The soil doesnt look bad either.
Kindest regards Piglet

"You cannot plough a field by turning it over in your mind".
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Jenny Green
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Yes, it was a lovely plot, with lovely soil. :cry:
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Jenny - sorry this is off-topic, but are these the Burton Latimer allotments? And did you have one next to (I think) Cecil? We had one there, you see and I think I recognise Albert's shed(?). Our site was between Martin and Alan - opposite John. Only had it for a year before we moved to Leicestershire. If I have got the right person, you used to go down on Sundays?
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Chez
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Oops - that's was me above.
The cow is of the bovine ilk
One end is moo, the other, milk.
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Johnboy
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Hi Jenny,
So it appears that it was a success and now after all that hard work it is bearing fruit for another.
Thats real hard luck. However thanks for the posting and I am sorry to have badgered you over the months.
I do hope that your husband has fully recovered the things are running smoothly for you now.
JB.
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