Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prior owners of our house used a chemical lawn service. We didn't. It took five years for the lawn to cycle through every pest and disease it was susceptible to in its weak, chemical-dependent state. It literally went through withdrawal.
We kept feeding it compost and improving the soil with aeration, reseeding with more appropriate grass, etc. It recovered and became a healthy lawn that barely even needed to be watered. Of course, since then we have eliminated much of the lawn with a more diverse garden.
How did you get rid of the weeds?
Anonymous wrote:SO if my entire lawn is weeds, can i effectively start over by residing, or will the same weeds come up through the new grass?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prior owners of our house used a chemical lawn service. We didn't. It took five years for the lawn to cycle through every pest and disease it was susceptible to in its weak, chemical-dependent state. It literally went through withdrawal.
We kept feeding it compost and improving the soil with aeration, reseeding with more appropriate grass, etc. It recovered and became a healthy lawn that barely even needed to be watered. Of course, since then we have eliminated much of the lawn with a more diverse garden.
How did you get rid of the weeds?
Anonymous wrote:Same as pharmaceuticals in humans btw. The healthiest people don’t take medications. Once you start, it’s usually all downhill from there.
Anonymous wrote:Same as pharmaceuticals in humans btw. The healthiest people don’t take medications. Once you start, it’s usually all downhill from there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have read that spray herbicide begets a cycle of more weeds/more spraying. Why would this be?
It's not, that's just one of those myths dumb people come up with, probably due to laziness and allowing undesirable plants to invade after spraying.
If you spray the desirable plants as well when spraying the "weeds" then you kill off the more desirable, and often slower growing plants, which if you don't stay on top of the situation, the "weeds" take over as they grow faster than the desirable plants.
It's funny how humans have chosen the weaker plants, like most yard grasses, roses, flowers, etc. as desirable, and the hearty tough invasive plants are considered undesirable and called "weeds" due to that. But it is what it is.
Anonymous wrote:I have read that spray herbicide begets a cycle of more weeds/more spraying. Why would this be?
Anonymous wrote:It destroys the microbiome in the soil. Healthy soil makes healthy plants. Poor soil makes weeds.
Anonymous wrote:Prior owners of our house used a chemical lawn service. We didn't. It took five years for the lawn to cycle through every pest and disease it was susceptible to in its weak, chemical-dependent state. It literally went through withdrawal.
We kept feeding it compost and improving the soil with aeration, reseeding with more appropriate grass, etc. It recovered and became a healthy lawn that barely even needed to be watered. Of course, since then we have eliminated much of the lawn with a more diverse garden.
Anonymous wrote:It destroys the microbiome in the soil. Healthy soil makes healthy plants. Poor soil makes weeds.