How do I start a vegetable garden in a weed infested area?

Filed under: Gardening |

Question by Tracy R: How do I start a vegetable garden in a weed infested area?
We have a 20 x 50 foot area for a vegetable garden. It has a ton of weeds. This Spring we used a hoe, cut down the weeds, pulled a ton of them then sprayed weed killer on top. Now it’s mid-Summer and the weeds are taking over again. What can I do?

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16 Responses to How do I start a vegetable garden in a weed infested area?

  1. smoke em weed

    letoya_5
    December 20, 2011 at 8:35 pm
    Reply

  2. Till the area.

    deltaqueen
    December 20, 2011 at 9:04 pm
    Reply

  3. Make sure that you rip the weeds out by the roots.

    Vics
    December 20, 2011 at 9:20 pm
    Reply

  4. How often do you weed? Its probably going to need to be every day or two at least to keep on top of the weeds during the summer. You coulkd try covering any unused patches of ground with a black plastic mulch to stop more growing though

    welsh_witch_sally
    December 20, 2011 at 10:01 pm
    Reply

  5. You have to kill the seeds, too!
    Put a black tarp over the area in the summer.
    The heat will cook the seeds.

    Add 3″ of sand and 4″ of soil if you really want to be safe.
    Have fun!

    Ben
    December 20, 2011 at 10:58 pm
    Reply

  6. ripe them out
    dry it

    dig it

    put new soil

    snowy
    December 20, 2011 at 11:25 pm
    Reply

  7. Weeds will persist for several years (like forever) because they have dropped their seed into the soil. The only way is to keep digging the garden and shaking the dirt from the roots of the weeds that you pull up. Personally I don’t like weedkiller because so many weedkillers contain chemicals that are environmentally dangerous. It IS hard work, year after year to continually pull weeds, BUT it means that you have fertile soil, and gradually it should start to improve if you persist.

    Learn from the weeds, notice which types are most prolific, and try to select veggies to grow which share the same preferences for type of soil, and microclimate (shade, dew, rainfall etc.)

    kittybriton
    December 20, 2011 at 11:37 pm
    Reply

  8. First you must smoke all the weed. Be sure to have plenty of munchies and then plant you’re vegetables.

    Trick69
    December 20, 2011 at 11:59 pm
    Reply

  9. stop using chemicals and pull the weeds by hand carefully keep up with them when they’re small and try using ground covers they will also help to retain moisture next spring you can put a plastic sheet down and the sun will help to kill weed seeds by raising the ground temp its more work but worth the effort

    tinman
    December 21, 2011 at 12:51 am
    Reply

  10. try spraying twice before tilling two week interval

    Robert N
    December 21, 2011 at 1:29 am
    Reply

  11. MULCH, MULCH, MULCH! Put a good mulch down after you have cut down all the weeds. Also use a product such as Preen to stop new weeds from growing. Mulch again. Also, in the fall put turn over the garden and work the existing mulch into the soil. And then a heavy layer of mulch over the turned soil and let it stay there over the winter. Mulch and Preen are your best defense!

    John S
    December 21, 2011 at 2:10 am
    Reply

  12. GET A GOOD SHOVEL AND TURN OVER THE SOIL…WEEDS AND ALL….DEEPLY…..YOU MIGHT ADD SOME MANURE TO THE SOIL…… AND CHOP IT UP ALOT…. PLANT IN ROWS ….GET A BALE OR TWO OF HAY OR STRAW AND PLACE AROUND THE PLANTINGS SO NO WEEDS GET LIGHT TO GROW….. USE MIRACLE GROW IN THE WATER WHEN YOU DO IT GIVES GREAT RESULTS…..

    flowerspirit2000
    December 21, 2011 at 3:01 am
    Reply

  13. If you choose to put weed killer down again you have to wait a couple of weeks before you plant your garden. Tis better to plow with tractor or till the area then rake out what has come loose and pull up the rest. If you will till just before winter you will bring alot of the weed seed and roots to the surface and the winter will kill them off. plow again in early spring and rake and pull. When you put the garden in lay newspaper in several thicknesses between each row. keeps weeds down and can be plowed into ground in the fall. A garden is constant up keep. We are in our garden almost everyday when it is growing-tilling between rows, pulling weeds, hoeing, or harvesting. Great exercise. You might want to cut your space down a little if you dont want to be overwhelmed. Plant a cover crop on half your space to keep weeds down. See below website for explanation and suggestions. good luck. m

    Mache
    December 21, 2011 at 3:29 am
    Reply

  14. To emphasize what others have said – DON’T SPRAY! One of the reasons for a home garden is to avoid all the toxic chemicals on commercially raised produce!

    Gardens require constant work. You need to be out there almost daily, pulling weeds, watching for insects, etc. There is no way to eliminate weeds; their seeds persist in the soil and live forever. I’ve gardened in the same spot for 25 years and the weeds just keep coming!

    Try this: next year, after you plant, go out every few days and cultivate (with a hoe or scratch tool) around the plants. Disturbing the soil dislodges and kills tiny weeds before they get a hold.

    Another solution several people have mentioned is mulch. Thick layers of newspaper (or straw or grass clippings – if your lawn has not been sprayed with chemicals) between rows will smother weeds. You can also lay down black plastic in the row, then poke holes in it to set your seedlings. Hardware stores and garden supply stores sell this. Hold it down with stones. For crops you sow from seed, like beans, there is no alternative but to keep pulling those weeds!

    keepsondancing
    December 21, 2011 at 4:29 am
    Reply

  15. Pull the weeds or hoe the garden (not too deep as you don’t want to injure good plants’ roots). If you hoe periodically, the weeds will never get too bad.

    Don’t use weed killer again. In the spring, just mow/mulch the remaining weeds and till them in.

    If you want to mulch, consider grass clippings. One university study concluded that grass clippings are the best mulch for any variety of tomato under any climate and soil conditions. It won every time.

    Weeds are a part of gardening, so just enjoy the work.

    prosopopoeia
    December 21, 2011 at 4:50 am
    Reply

  16. put down plastic, then put in new soil. the weeds will gradually die. i did that when i put in a new flower garden in the yard. it works.

    wanda_wright92
    December 21, 2011 at 4:51 am
    Reply

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