Battling Several of Contra Costa County's
More Noxious Garden Weeds
Advice for the Home Gardener from the Contra Costa Master Gardeners' Help Desk
Client's Problem and Questions:
Advice from the CCMGs' Help Desk
"Researchers around the world are investigating approaches for controlling Bermuda buttercup. Some suggest covering infestations with stiff cardboard, then covering the cardboard with a thick layer of organic mulch to kill the plants and weaken the bulbs, making them less capable of competing with desirable plants. Keep the mulch on the infestation until the mulch and cardboard have rotted, then plant competitive ornamentals into the soil-mulch mixture."
The Contra Costa Master Gardener article, "Oxalis: From Ornament to Nuisance" will give you even further insight on controlling Oxalis per-caprae. http://ccmg.ucanr.edu/files/83817.pdf
I know that the management of these weeds is a big challenge and wish you all the best in dealing with it!
Contra Costa Master Gardeners' Help Desk
Note: The Contra Costa Master Gardener Help Desk is available year-round to answer your gardening questions. Except for a few holidays, we're open every week, Monday through Thursday for walk-ins from 9:00 am to Noon at 75 Santa Barbara Road, 2d Floor, Pleasant Hill, CA 94523. We can also be reached via telephone: (925) 646-6586, email: ccmg@ucanr.edu, or on the web at http://ccmg.ucanr.edu/Ask_Us/
Comments:
I know exactly (well maybe 99%) what weed you are talking about...It's Cardamine hirsuta... often called Hariy Bittercress...and it is definitely a pain... so much so I wrote an article for the internal CCMG newsletter on the weed titled "My Favorite Weed"... it still looks readable a year later and I will post it to the blog within the next day... hopefully you will find it informative...but you aren't going to like the fact that it's a stubborn weed, but I did find that it is edible but I haven't tried it personally...anyway, look on the HortCoCo blog next day or so...
CHEERS
Steve
If, after you've looked through the pest notes attached to the above post, you’d like a more information, consider sending an email to our Help Desk @ ccmg@ucanr.edu. They have so many resources at their fingertips, and the volunteers working the desk love to research these type of questions.
I just finished reading your article on noxious weeds I CCCounty, and much to my dismay realize that I, too, have this growing in many parts of my yard. I mistakenly have allowed it to flourish because I thought they were Shamrocks, not an invasive weed! I gather from your article I should be aggressively discouraging them. I also have wild onions, and it's a chore to stay on top of their eradication.
My question is what about these invasive weeds that explode in your face when you go to pick them. Hundreds of seeds pop out, and there seems to be no way of getting rid of them without destroying everything around them!
Help:-).
Posted by Angela Anastasion on March 8, 2015 at 7:22 PM