The Canada Thistle basically laughed at me. I feel you on this! 🤣
@jodibraun63838 ай бұрын
Canada thistle is a real jerk. 😅 I've been battling gigantic thistles for years. Straight vinegar kills the original plant, but they do travel, unfortunately.
@mandy34868 ай бұрын
Painful to remove too!
@mominthe2098 ай бұрын
My weeds taunt me by singing opera.
@esava28747 ай бұрын
@@mandy3486 not with grampas weed puller! Your welcome!
@michynature7 ай бұрын
They come on with my dogs all day long 😭
@flowerpixel8 ай бұрын
I love this. No bs, no click bait
@skoalar8 ай бұрын
I just saw your channel for the first time today and I am impressed. Your advice on weeding is spot on. I’ve been gardening for 50 years now and I found the best way to keep your garden tidy is the visit every day with a trowel and weed not only is this a very effective way to keep weeds down but you get to know your plants best when you visit them every day.
@deewinston56518 ай бұрын
Thank you Luke.
@JerzeyGardenZ8 ай бұрын
Air , water .soil and the farmers shadow all plants need
@MIgardener8 ай бұрын
Glad you found us!
@sisterinspeed8 ай бұрын
Canada thistle is the bane of my existence! It's in all my raised beds. I was gonna try sheet mulching with cardboard, so glad I watched this, I'll just keep pulling them out! LOL
@amommalee91058 ай бұрын
It won't work. I tried it. The damned things thrive in the mulch and get stronger.
@StevenBishop-c9r7 ай бұрын
bindweed is the Devil as well. Several years ago, I watched it creeping up the curbside all through town...and right into my garden.
@jedclampett77057 ай бұрын
@@StevenBishop-c9r Totally agree! Granddaddy of weeds right there. Second to NONE!
@FixtheGodofBiscuits8 ай бұрын
Here in WA State, it's the Himalayan Blackberry. Invasive, obnoxious, and borderline immortal. Old timers talk about pouring diesel on them, only to have new growth come up a few feet away. Last year I cleared back an acre of them as thick as Colombian rainforest and used an excavator to till up the first 14 inches of soil so I could rake out the root balls. I still have to walk the area daily and pluck up new sprouts. It may well take years, but I'm gonna win this battle.
@andrewsackville-west16098 ай бұрын
The soil seed bank of Himalayan blackberry is insurmountable. Tens of thousands of seeds per square foot. You'll be pulling sprouts forever. What I have discovered observing my Himalayan blackberry here in Oregon is that you can shade it out. For example, I have significantly less invasive blackberry under the big leaf maple trees. I have heard that a well managed Hazel coppice will also out compete the blackberry. So, my advice is clear the blackberry, dig the root balls, and then plant tall cover crops. Ensure you maintain cover crops to minimize germination of seed in the top layers of soil. stop tilling, so you don't expose more seed to germination. This solution is speculation, on my part, as I haven't had the opportunity to really implement it yet.
@matthawkins45798 ай бұрын
I am going to assume that your invasive blackberry is the same as mine (Southern Vancouver Island here) and yes, they are immortal and unkillable.
@bigbearbear54588 ай бұрын
When I moved into my WA property about 3 years ago, I had a very serious problem with these Himalayan Blackberry from the neighbor's property. His land is mostly unmanaged and the blackberry was so thick and tall that they were pushing against our fence and coming right over the top as well. It took some research but what I learn about these blackberry plants is that they have a critical weakness, and that is during fall the blackberry plant will try to store as much energy as possible to their root system. If you hit them with a proper concentration of herbicide like glyphosate in fall, they will quickly absorb the chemical into their root and die off. Herbicides that contain Triclopyr works well against blackberry too, just know that if you spray in spring when the plant is pushing all of its energy up top to produce flowers and fruits, the chemicals won't reach the roots as easily so you'll have to spray again in fall. This is probably why people think the Himalayan Blackberry is practically immortal as most people like to spray weeds in Spring when they are actively growing.
@ramportland7 ай бұрын
And not even from the HImalays.
@oliviac65396 ай бұрын
That’s the good fight-I commend you 🫡
@cbass27558 ай бұрын
My lawn is green weeds. I keep it cut and trimmed and it looks fine as curb appeal. I lost the battle of years working on that grass. I gave up, embraced it, and as long as it’s cut, I’m good
@micheledupreystrong8 ай бұрын
I love our clover, dandelion, and violets. it's so pretty in spring we let it grow some... for the bees... and because the purple, yellow, and white are a really pretty color combination ☺️
@cbass27558 ай бұрын
@@micheledupreystrong Very true! My weeds are pretty this time. Loads of wild violets!
@alorastewart70918 ай бұрын
My moms back yard is a mix of weeds and bermuda grass I also think it looks totally fine so long as it gets cut regularly
@jon27d8 ай бұрын
Added bonus that your yard won't turn brown as quickly during a drought. Last year during the hottest part of the summer our yard (a mix of dandelions, violets, clover, grass, etc, etc) was still mostly green while all of the surrounding yards that had been carefully cultivated to be only grass turned brown or needed to be watered a ton.
@cbass27558 ай бұрын
@@jon27d Yes! True. I didn’t think about that. 👍
@carvedwood19538 ай бұрын
As for dandelion removal, I don't do it. I don't find it to be a problem. The root brings up nutrients. The flowers bring in pollinators. The entire plant is a vegetable lol. I don't weed out lettuce, I don't weed out dandelion.
@charliedoyle78248 ай бұрын
I've been digging up dandelions for ten years now because I live on the edge of a forest with all native plants, except for dandelions. I had so many that it bothered me, so I've been digging up probably a hundred a year. This year it's about fifty, with most being very small, so I think I'm close. The big ones that go very deep are the toughest because they go deeper than one shovel blade, but if I get most of it except a small deep piece of root, it won't come back. I want all native plants in my yard.
@carvedwood19538 ай бұрын
@@charliedoyle7824 understandable. I am a huge native plant buff myself, but this is not a battle I choose to fight. There are bigger battles for me. But yeah if you just keep working at it and prevent them from going to seed you can be very successful getting rid of them. Part of the reason its not a big deal for me. There are plenty of more harmful invasives near me that are also nearly impossible to get rid of lol.
@ValSMITH-it4lg8 ай бұрын
I pull my dandelions and give them to my chickens, who then repay me with lots of eggs with bright orange yolks! Weeds can be useful indicators of problems with your soil, too. There is a KZbin channel hosted by a guy who is a orchard expert and he talks about what weeds reveal about your soil health. I am sorry but I don't remember his name.
@tneves16418 ай бұрын
@@ValSMITH-it4lg Stefan Sobkowiak its his name :)
@carvedwood19538 ай бұрын
@@ValSMITH-it4lg That is a great use. I wish I had chickens but I don't. So, I just cut out the middle man and eat the dandelions lol.
@etet45368 ай бұрын
Yes, I've heard my weeds laughing at me as well.
@jeffmeyers38378 ай бұрын
Here's a pro tip: When you spot it, cover it with something large (cardboard, burlap, wood). That does two things, it marks the spot for you to come back in a week or two, and it drains the root much faster, as the root pumps out tons of energy growing that plant longer looking for sunlight. So when you come back in a week or two, uncover it and remove it at that point. What you've done is drastically weakened the root the same amount as if you'd manually removed 10 small emerging weeds from the same mother root.
@Hupamaster8 ай бұрын
Love it, it really make sense. Use the plant’s strength to weaken it😎
@jeffmeyers38378 ай бұрын
@@Hupamaster Yup, that's why we're at the top of the food chain, lol
@JTRUTH20257 ай бұрын
After covering....to drain roots...can you weed wack it??? Also...was thinking if just covering whole area with Black plastic and leave in on for a few months?? I'm INFESTED with Canada Thisle WHOLE 100' x 100' Garden is COVERED in them....I've been fighting it for 4 years...I don't know what to do....HELP!!
@jeffmeyers38377 ай бұрын
@@JTRUTH2025 Covering with plastic is a very good idea, it's called the Stale Seed Bed method. Water it well before covering to encourage weed seeds to germinate, then pin down the plastic well or the thistle will push it up. Leave the plastic on as long as you can, up to a full year if possible. For the first year cover all soil except for your plants with either burlap bags or landscape fabric (can burn holes for your plants).
@dfu16857 ай бұрын
On paper this works, however if it’s growing in existing plants and hiding within perennial roots of plants you wish to keep alive, this method will not work. Unless you wish to kill all of your plants in order to kill the weed? And perhaps this is what it will take.
@micheledupreystrong8 ай бұрын
I did this last year and it works! very little to do this year. I wait until after a good rain, dig all the way around it with a shovel to loosen the root and pull it out ☺️
@JustMichiganDave8 ай бұрын
The thing about vinegar is you have to use garden grade, the regular grocery grade won't be strong enough. It also only works when it's hot out, like 90 degrees plus. It dessicates the plants by dissolving their protective wax coating and causes them to dry out and die basically. This time of year in Michigan it won't work as well.
@sherriianiro7478 ай бұрын
I use grocery vinegar to kill weeds in driveway cracks and it works -
@MaryPoppins-tu1ms7 ай бұрын
@@sherriianiro747 Yep, true!
@catsknit236 ай бұрын
Like he said, though, you're only killing the top plant. The root goes deep and wide. I've used the higher percent vinegar and yes, it kills the top just fine. But it sprouts up 3 feet away in a few days.
@SueL-c7v8 ай бұрын
I have Canada thistle too and I agree 100% that the only way to defeat it is to be constantly on the outlook for it. I saw that someone else in the comments takes a garden fork and searches out the roots; I do too. You just have to be consistent, but what a satisfying feeling when you win ☺
@KishorTwist4 ай бұрын
Its deep underground roots are a horror movie! I hope to never ever have a lone wind-blown seed to land in my garden! 🤞
@corleeashley80168 ай бұрын
I use the 1cu salt + dish soap added to 1 gal vinegar because the vinegar helped with the smaller thistles, but not as well on the larger ones. I like to keep in a pump sprayer for easy access. I have a large yard and there's no way I can keep up with digging up of all the thistle, but I dig up all around the house.
@teeshebas24788 ай бұрын
I use this method but use the ice melt you put on your driveway instead of salt (salt didn’t work for me). I figure if it kills everything green at the sides of our driveway, it should work on weeds too. I’ve only done this on a gravel pad where I don’t want ANY greenery tho, not in the middle of a garden or yard.
@bizzybee63428 ай бұрын
Pulling the weeds won't stop the wind from blowing in more weed seeds. It never ends. Weeds will always need to be pulled. I refuse to use chemicals to kill weeds.
@selinamcilwaine47317 ай бұрын
Try white vinegar!.
@TrumpWon4204 ай бұрын
Make the soil a place weeds don't want to grow.
@kurio9998 ай бұрын
I also pull, but use a garden fork. When lifting, I give the fork a shake to loosen the dirt and then lift out the roots. Need to do this gently as the roots snap easily and you don't want to leave any fragments.
@alietheredge8 ай бұрын
I find that dry ground makes it easier to break roots, so I do most of my weeding after rain n the ground is nice n soft n they pop up so much easier n roots are intact.
@callikohl56988 ай бұрын
Nebraska here. We have bindweed, timothy grass and buttonweed. Among others.
@suzannebinsley59408 ай бұрын
Bindweed is my problem in Michigan too.
@clairehiker8 ай бұрын
@@suzannebinsley5940 In western colorado, too.
@annaprigliano2217 ай бұрын
Just had a house built and sod put down. The first year was fine, but going on the second year our lawn was infested with Thistle. Use vinegar then dug them all up. Got about 90 percent, but still found a few stragglers. I just wanted to say that I liked how informative you are about this weed and all other subjects you have. Knowing now that I need to get the entire root system out will make me more alert to the possibility of them coming back. Love your channel. New member hocked on your channel. Thank you for sharing such great information with us.
@ramenaddict10008 ай бұрын
I have been doing the manual weed pulling for 4 years now. When I first moved in here in 2020, it was only a little over a month between my offer and final walkthrough and the difference was shocking. Beautiful garden to overgrown with 4’ of blooming thistles and bindweed. I had to hire someone to remove it and have been pulling weeds ever since. It looks much better now that I don’t let the thistles bloom.
@Ann-bw8hm8 ай бұрын
This is how I finally got my 25 year bindweed problem under control. I had heard that you will only make bindweed stronger if you pull it out so I spent years trying every other method. None of it worked, so I gave up and started pulling it out as soon as it would emerge. Did this every day. Took me two years to get rid of it but it worked! And like you said, I enjoy my garden so much more now.
@xbriannaxbananax8 ай бұрын
I am glad to get this information. I was so diligent about weeding at the start of last summer and then got lazy. I will try and keep up on it better this year!
@BecomingaGreenstalker8 ай бұрын
Luke, your ability to deliver not so great news and still smile is awesome! I wish you guys were closer to me so I could shop in your store! 😊
@MIgardener8 ай бұрын
Maybe one day!
@WaskiSquirrel8 ай бұрын
I get the Canadian Thistles and the Bindweed. My experience was that daily physical removal was best, so I'm glad to get confirmation of that! since I was busy last summer with classes, I failed in this, and it was amazing how the weeds in the garden took off! This summer will be catch-up time!
@giapetto28 ай бұрын
Took me three years to rid my backyard of Goat Heads/puncture vine (in New Mexico). The seeds can be dormant for years and wait for a bit of rain or moisture. Physical removal was necessary.
@lyndelgado61388 ай бұрын
I physically removed goats head from far east edge of east neighbors median for 2yrs to keep it from travelling 2 my yard. Goats head can go thru thin soled shoes. Oww!
@refarmer15748 ай бұрын
Several years ago, we got two dump truck loads of soil, having each load deposited in a different location. While we worked through one pile, the other was covered with a white tarp. When we started working on the second pile and uncovered it, we found thistles had made their way through the soil - over 4' deep at the highest - and were thriving under the tarp. As we dig through the pile to use the soil, we uncover the roots. They are ridiculously fragile, easily breaking apart into smaller pieces. We have to sift the soil before we can use it, but I'm sure root fragments are still getting through the quarter inch mesh on the sifter!
@mariephillips13938 ай бұрын
Here in South Carolina we have so many invading weeds. One of my biggest enemies is rattle snake weed. To fight it this year I am actually digging out my beds and sifting through the soil to remove as many roots as possible. I didn’t want to disturb the soil this much, but it has to be done. I’m also redoing the pathways between the beds. That will be an all year project.
@Freedommjw8 ай бұрын
Florida Betony for me. 😢
@EP-qi8ed8 ай бұрын
Bishop's Weed north of you in 7B! Arg!!!
@mariephillips13938 ай бұрын
@@Freedommjw I’ve been told that rattlesnake weed is also known as Florida Betony
@Freedommjw8 ай бұрын
@@mariephillips1393 We've got industrial strength bugs here in SC too! 😩
@BeeHappy9688 ай бұрын
Salal here on the west coast. It grows right through any weed paper😑we sifted through one of the beds but I’m afraid it still has spores left behind. We’ll see how it does.
@Ladydragon17768 ай бұрын
I plant dandolions purslane in my garden. Both are Great ground cover. Helps keep the soil from drying out in out hot climate. dandolions bring polinators. Are easy to grow .. And leaves are a great salad addition. Make a tea out of the roots. Purslane also has pretty different color flowers that bring polinators leaves can be eaten in a salads or cooked. Most people consider them weeds. I love them. Fir the easy growth drought tollarent and ground cover in addition to the nutrition.
@lorelynleisure40488 ай бұрын
I don't have lots of yard waste to make compost, so I do use things like thistle by making compost tea with it. When they're really well rotted in the tea, they then go in the compost without a problem. I just stick it all in a large black trach can, cover with water, put on the cover and it cooks in the sun. The smell sucks when you open it, but diluted, it is good fertilizer!
@asha.m8 ай бұрын
Last July I started cutting them off at the soil level every week before cutting the lawn. By end Sept, their production had reduced about 80%. Maybe I love a challenge because I'm looking forward to my war on this thistle this summer 😂
@missiechako59178 ай бұрын
Here on our Farm we've been working on mitigation of Hemlock for last 2 years! Have to NEVER let it go to seed as it has a 2 year seed bank in the soil!
@GetFitEatRight8 ай бұрын
Its everywhere and it hurts lol!
@kennithnieman91307 ай бұрын
I don't have a garden where I live now but I'm moving to a new place with the room and a huge green house so I'm watching your channel to brush up for next spring, thanks for the content.
@TravisPflanz6 ай бұрын
Hey Luke, lovin' the channel from Kansas City! Quick note - when you put your weeds at the curb, that likely means they're just ending up in the city's supply of compost. Also, ending up your neighbors' compost and gardens if your city has a free or low-cost compost and mulch program for residents.
@JW451748 ай бұрын
Here’s my take on a major Canadian Thistle problem we have: the mother root is about 6 ft down. Aside from digging down and getting that being diligent is key. I don’t see much difference in using garden strength vinegar (20%) vs pulling except pulling will increase the odds of root fragments. The key is preventing photosynthesis. You are correct that when you pull thistle it energizes the remaining root to proliferate. The way I see it is if you spray the vinegar and kill the tops it will stop the photosynthesis and eventually the mother root will give up. Unfortunately this may take several years. Diligence is key.
@whistlebird8 ай бұрын
Bindweed is the bane of my gardening existence and I'm pretty sure it's also communal. Good to know there is a way to get rid of it. I just have to not do what I did last year and give up on it! I'm seeing the effects of that now 😅
@billinburlington55078 ай бұрын
My issue too. His suggestion has helped me, but I didn’t realize a daily check is needed… I Was doing it once a week. Easy in the flower bed, hard in the It’s hard to see in the thick lawn though.
@Nocare898 ай бұрын
Composting weeds is fine. Especially if you dry them out before adding to a pile. I'm not talking about a macho 30day pile but a long term pile you flip through the season every 1-2 weeks. Things will sprout, yes. When you flip the pile you disrupt and smother those sprouts. By the time its broken down to a soil-like state over like 6 months.. its fine. My compost is 90% blackberry vines. I've yet to have one root in my garden. The one thing I've had trouble with is quackgrass. And I have an in-ground garden without an ability to buffer-mulch. Clover creeps in too and can be a nuisance but its easy to cut back and its a great cover over winter. Dandelions are fine. As long as they aren't directly competing with a veggie I don't care.
@Bobrogers996 ай бұрын
I acquired one bindweed plant from a neighbor's donation to my day lily garden. It has taken TEN years of persistent snipping/removal a dozen times every summer to get rid of it, and even now I check the area to see if it has returned. It's the most tenacious weed I've ever encountered, but my persistence has finally paid off. I think.....
@justinp17738 ай бұрын
Great tips! Instead of sending those weeds to the landfill, you could leave them in the black garbage bag for a week or so out in the hot summer sun. That will kill them off and then leave them safe to compost. I chop mine up and then leave them in a bucket for a week to dry out before composting. I do get rid of seed heads though.
@schroeder3148 ай бұрын
I have been struggling with Canada thistle for 5 years! I have been ruthlessly pulling it for 3 years, including digging up the entire root system to the best of my ability last spring. VERY frustrating. It has even sprouted up into my patio pavers, meaning I can't access those roots. I hope this battle starts to turn in my favor soon.
@nikkijohnson5528 ай бұрын
You confirmed my suspicion that thistle came in last year’s mulch! This Spring I laid a thick layer of newspaper before mulch and weeds are fewer - but yesterday I was digging thistle way deep down to get the root. I’ll keep digging til they’re gone! Thanks!
@robinrieffer26657 ай бұрын
I'm so glad that you came through the procedure, OK. Hopefully, the results will be positive, and you'll get some answers that will help you. Love ya lots!
@Mysticfox-wk2be8 ай бұрын
I had a bad infestation of canada thistle in my yard. Multiple spots that i found mature plants growing. My strategy was with the large plants to glove up and pull them out manually and trying to get as much of the root out with it as possible. Then i covered it with fresh grass clippings to stop it from growing back in that spot. Turns out matted down grass clippings works pretty well to choke out weeds. The smaller ones i burned out once a week with a propane torch. weed seeds cant germinate if they are charcoal. By the end of that summer most of the spots had been successfully killed off. Best tools i have purchased for weed control has been a weed dragon (a propane fuel torch on a long stick) and a belt torch from the hardware store. belt torch has a pull trigger on/off so you don't have to waste fuel on small precision weeding between plants and the weed dragon is great for clearing larger areas like in paths and between rows in the garden. Bunus: fire is organic.
@lisamorris42328 ай бұрын
Campanula creeping bellflower is my nemesis. Tried black plastic for a year to no avail. It's still going in my ground cover in the shade and pulling to control but it's not gone.
@rubysilver32998 ай бұрын
I’ve been calling it “creeping hellflower.”
@corymonroe73438 ай бұрын
Always great videos and vibes. Alot of these weeds are very beneficial so save and dry the roots when you dig them out. Especially the dandelion 😊
5 ай бұрын
I'm doing this also for bindweed - its two years now and they still seem pretty vigorous. But I'm not giving up.
@caseyhartman70948 ай бұрын
There are a bunch of these in my yard. I need to start digging them out.
@jnaperski8 ай бұрын
For thistle, I use Lontrel. Although a formal herbicide and not organic....but only kills a few types of plants, so it really doesnt hurt many veggies if you had to use in the garden. But I only put 1 drop on each "plant", and let it sit until it dies away and goes into the root. Youll never have thistle again. The way I got it in my garden, as we have a friend that has horses and I thought using horse manure was a good thing, but horse only have 1 stomach (unlike cow/goats) so a lot of the seeds that they eat, dont get digested, and planted in your garden. my 4 beds were 80% thistle....thats why I had to use Lontrel. Didnt kill/bother the asparagus or strawberries
@loiscreighton57988 ай бұрын
I am a longtime fan of composting and strove to keep all organic matter my property produced, even weeds. I composted too many seedy weeds that have caused a big problem. To compound the problem, I couldn't garden (well) for a couple of seasons so things got even worse. THANK YOU for giving wise advice to dispose of weeds that cause significant problems around my property!
@Guitarzan88 ай бұрын
My problem here in MN is Nettle. I’ve been manually pulling them when I can. There seems to be way less of them. But they still are coming up here and there. You motivated me to keep going. Thx.
@CelestialPopCollectiveOfficial8 ай бұрын
My entire yard is full of dandelion. I’m feeding the bees! When the lawns get cut, they grow right back and flower again. If you love your bees….let them have this! If you remove their first food source, the bees will have to wait for other flowers to start pollinating.
@timandsuzidickey93588 ай бұрын
wow.... and I thought I was the only one !!....thise and Voles. !!!
@homerooster40228 ай бұрын
In the UK I know this as creeping thistle! It does just as described!
@awilk078 ай бұрын
I agree that pulling is the way to go, i was helping a friend out and she wanted a "weed-free" garden and i told her the only way to do that was to pick the weeds out by hand because even laying barriers down won't stop the wind from blowing new weed seeds on top. She was not happy and decided gardening was not for her. I love getting my hards dirty
@bahba92477 ай бұрын
I put on my Bose headphones and listen to podcasts (through my phone) while I weed or do garden chores. It really helps when doing the more unpleasant chores like weeding.
@hollish1968 ай бұрын
Wow! I learned so much today! Great video. So glad I recently found your channel and subscribed. I use small animal bedding as mulch. No weeds and no jumping worms!
@sorbabaric18 ай бұрын
In areas I don’t want dandelions (my front lawn) I walk around and dead head the flowers. Easy & good exercise. After 2 years in my current home, this year I’ve had 2 flowers to dead head so far. Looking at my front lawn now, zero in sight. For the other undesirable plants, among the flower beds, I’m learning early & frequent intervention by pulling them up as youngsters is best. For the grape arbors, chickens and milky spore are winning the battle against the Japanese beetles. A happy accident is as the chickens have scratched under the grapes looking for bugs, the area is being naturalized by spreading purple viola. I love violas.
@finagill8 ай бұрын
I deal with Bermuda grass. Cardboard sheet mulching doesn't work for long. I've had it grow through over a foot of mulch. This year I decided to dig out the area around my garden and lay down some cardboard and woodchips. We'll see how it goes.
@davemeise21928 ай бұрын
A while ago I tried to dig up a Canada Thistle as it had come up in my new garden. It was just one plant so I thought, "I'll just dig it up roots and all, no problem." I followed the roots and dug down almost three feet and then, following the root, another three feet towards the neighbours place before I gave up. It came back a few weeks later. Very tough plant. I ended up doing what you suggested for the next five years but as I couldn't do anything about the neighbours plants I had to dig up each new thistle as it came up. It encouraged the plant to go somewhere else. I never got rid of it but it had almost stopped trying to come into my place before I moved.
@dirtpoorhomestead40368 ай бұрын
Thistle is my main adversary in my garden. I've been fighting it for over 6 years but have finally turned the tide and am winning the battle. Instead of just removing the top of the plant though I dig down and remove as much of the root as possible.
@pjgangster20008 ай бұрын
I have a big Canadian thistle in my yard. It’s good to know I’m not wasting my time pulling them out. Downside is they are in my neighbor’s yard and they are doing anything about them, so I’ll probably never be rid of them.
@dorianmorton678 ай бұрын
Stop blaming thistles on Canada lol.🇨🇦❤️
@mrcryptozoic8178 ай бұрын
Interesting. Isn't it actually from Russia to Canada and from there to the lower 48? In my area, puncture vine is pervasive. Use a hoe, scrape it into a pile and bag it as soon as it's identifiable.
@dorianmorton678 ай бұрын
@@mrcryptozoic817 yes I love that! Let’s call it the Russia thistle! 🤪
@Jenny-bc5kz8 ай бұрын
It actually originated from Europe... signed Canadians 😂
@peggyh48058 ай бұрын
O Canada. Last year at my house it was your smoke, this year your thistle! 🇺🇸💙🇨🇦
@dorianmorton678 ай бұрын
@@peggyh4805 sorry! Lol 🇨🇦❤️
@Oktopia8 ай бұрын
I have a warm compost where any seeds or roots die from the heat. I think of weeds as more material. I also use weeds in teas to use as fertilizer. All good.
@southerncomfort9718 ай бұрын
I spent many years using every thing under the sun to no avail. so I moved to removal for areas where I have not used thick cardboard. I find if I give the removal spot a decent dose of Vinegar it seems to clear a somewhat larger area. Not sure if it some how gets to the root system or its pure luck either way It does seem to help. But cardboard and pulling them are the only effective way to get rid of any weed. Thanks for the video, always fun and informative.
@kamoodle57 ай бұрын
I previously had Virginia copperleaves, clovers, dandelions, and wandering jews in my garden when I started over earlier this year. Plucking them out and uprooting clover bulbs was the best strategy for me. The wandering jews also tried to take over another bed where I have my corn and other plants.
@minkademko23358 ай бұрын
East Texas Piney Woods here. I get dewberry and greenbriar vines. Ouchies! They are impossible to get rid of, so I just cut them back to the ground, occasionally digging some of the roots. It's a constant battle! Weeding while going to the garden is a habit well worth developing, and it's a little bit of good exercise.
@lindawisner35258 ай бұрын
You need a nail. There's a hand tool called silver nail? You can tease out the roots easily with it. Easier when soil is a bit damp, not dry.
@giangdang51396 ай бұрын
Thanks .... I made one mistate composting weed ...will avoid it later.
@jeas49808 ай бұрын
Say what you will... but Fire is working! I have vinica and rhizome lateral grasses. I'm trying not to alow the photosynthetic process by destroying the surface leaves with fire and simultaneously not turning up the seed bank. It's working pretty well!
@justbychance70128 ай бұрын
Ours is Creeping Jenny. It kills the thistles!! Absolutely hate that stuff. I will try this on that too. 😊
@samuelsmama137 ай бұрын
We did physical removal for the last 3 years of this darned Canada thistle. Tried all the other options mentioned, also. Finally, I decided to cover everything in a very thick, good quality landscape fabric. I discovered when pulling them out manually a couple of years ago that I’m very allergic to it, so this was the best option for us. Hopefully this will solve our problem!
@63SpaceGirl7 ай бұрын
QUESTION @MIgardner If we dig up the Thistle and then put corn meal into the hole, do you think it would stop the roots from growing?
@RoquetSynce7 ай бұрын
This is a brilliant video. Wish i had seen this a few summers ago! Any suggestions on how to deal with my neighbours blackberry bushes that continue to creep thru, under and over my fence into my garden beds?
@MsCindyh8 ай бұрын
I have something called bull thistle…been digging it for years! Now Virginia creeper and sticky Willy? is coming up everywhere.
@jennyburrell48574 ай бұрын
How would you go about removing them from your grass?
@mrjasberry8 ай бұрын
These things showed up in my yard two years ago and I’ve been fighting them ever since. Thanks for letting me what I’m dealing with.
@rogerclarke74078 ай бұрын
I ended up scraping all the topsoil off and sifted out all the roots, i double dug while i was at it. still some got through but they where a lot easier to pull.
@ryancouture25088 ай бұрын
Round up works great. Use it sparingly and properly.
@can-cruiser8 ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks. What do you recommend to combat quack grass (crab grass) that has infested my yard?
@awilk078 ай бұрын
Bindweed is my bane. I did some cardboard sheet mulching to kind of "start over" because previous homeowner let it get out of control and no amount of weeding would help. But it also grows via roots so I know it will come back but hopefully now that I have the cardboard and mulch over it, it will be slow to return and I can stay on top of it.
@billinburlington55078 ай бұрын
Thanks… I’ll try the cardboard mulch. Regular wood mulch doesn’t help much
@awilk078 ай бұрын
@@billinburlington5507 I did cardboard, then dirt then wood mulch so it was a pretty thick layer to smother those weeds. I've done it before with success. Great big reduction in weeds
@rodnjosh8 ай бұрын
Bindweed is the same as thistle. If it finds a gap in the cardboard it will sprout up between it. The best way that I have found to get rid of these types of weeds is to dig them up with a digging fork. I also try to trace the root as far as I can and dig up all of the root that I can find. This is very labor intensive, but I have tried everything else, and digging them up repeatedly is the only way that works. I have been gardening for over 50 years and have moved several times. Only to have to start over again battling these invasive weeds.
@Gardenfrog8 ай бұрын
If you have a larger patch of Canada thistle I have had luck letting it grow just until it starts to flower. Do NOT let it go to seed. Once the thistle is getting close to flowering watch the weather forecast. You will have best luck if you have more than two really hot sunny days in a row. Cut it off around noon with a weed wacker about 4 inches above the soil. This will stress it out with the heat. The next day water the hollow stems of the thistle thoroughly. The water will go down and start to rot the stem. When the thistle is flowering it is putting a lot of energy into reproducing. This method has worked successfully on a patch of thistle for me. May or may not work if there are only 2 or 3 plants. I’ve had less success with single plants. Edit-after cutting the plants gather them up and take them away. If you leave them on the ground even cut off the seeds may continue to develop.
@christineedwards48658 ай бұрын
I think it's less successful on fewer plants because rot sets in more easily in dense groupings of plants where there is less air flow. This is great advice that works on many types of herbaceous plants, you can increase the chances of rot setting in by watering with nitrogen or microbe rich solutions like compost teas, coffee, or even urine. It could be taken a step further by covering with plastic. The wetter you keep the soil, the more easily root or crown rot will set in, so frequent overwatering can sometimes work. I don't think this technique works well with many plants that have deep taproots, for instance, yellow dock. Canada thistle is a tough perennial that can easily regenerate from it's roots, and I prefer to dig it up or at the very least pull out what I can as frequently as possible, there's no faster way to remove a weed from sight anyways.
@Xzenoph8 ай бұрын
Water the weeds? Lol.
@christineedwards48658 ай бұрын
@@Xzenoph It does sound counterintuitive, but if you ever noticed an area in someone's yard where their dog always goes, it can become a small patch of desert because the "watering" is killing the plants off.
@joanl20578 ай бұрын
I looked it up, Canadian thistle has edible young leaves.
@L3Arm8 ай бұрын
Is this true for trumpet vine? My front garden is one huge subterranean network of plant root. I dig down and get up what I can, and am working harder to keep it gone. But that hasn't seemed to make enough difference.
@catsknit236 ай бұрын
Yep, I never had Canada thistle until I had a large load of wood chips dumped and it took me awhile to get them moved and distributed. By then, the original area was full of thistles and I've been battling it for 5+ years now. Tried the vinegar and even tried black plastic - they just spread! Have been working on your method of continued digging but hard to get out there every day.
@alorastewart70918 ай бұрын
The canada thistle is probably what is in my back garden bed right now lol ive been ignoring it while i work on my new beds. I always just pull the weeds till the stop coming back. The biggest problem in my garden is japanese knotweed (like if bamboo and bermuda grass had a baby lol). Its so strong trying to put things on top of it wont work. Digging it up only works if you get every single scrap of root out so similar to the canada thistle it has to be pulled up over and over until it stops growing. This is my 3rd year fighting it and ive drastically reduced it (used to fill a 6ft by 30ft space now it comes up mostly in the fence line and i keep a small patch by our pool as a privacy screen (plus the bees really like it late season). Then i get 20 or so shoots through the rest of the space that i have to tackle every couple days.
@Angie-ci1lp7 ай бұрын
Very informative! Thanks for sharing!
@danbartter78858 ай бұрын
Thistle is great for light flowers on the seeds that can carry them miles in a good wind - watch up wind and know your blowing seeds and try not to till them in!! In northern ohio I have baked a patch out with black plastic three august weeks - found two at the perimeter week four dug them up and 4' of plastic till the next may!
@teresastewart97608 ай бұрын
The bane of my North Carolina garden is Florida Betony! It is also a communal weed, but also makes tubers. If you leave any little part of a root or tuber, you can't get rid of it.
@juliebee618 ай бұрын
Thanks for using the proper common name for Canada thistle!! I’m a long time weed warrior.
@dawnteskey32598 ай бұрын
Bermuda grass is the bane of my existence in the garden.
@michellewelch60138 ай бұрын
Yep! In Southern California Bermuda is planted in every neighborhood. We’re doomed!
@Debbie-Keller8 ай бұрын
Mine too, in Texas!!
@DragnBreth898 ай бұрын
Same here in AZ. Evil stuff.
@alorastewart70918 ай бұрын
Same in Washington lol it's not too bad in my garden at my house but I have some space at my moms house too and it is everywhere I'm putting squash in there this year though so as long as I get the squash established before it goes crazy it can probably handle it
@melissahurn69258 ай бұрын
I just started feeding the birds in the fall and never considered that I was adding weeds to the flower bed. This is going to be a mess in a couple weeks. Thank you for letting me know to switch to sunflower seeds only for the flower bed
@katmurphy66348 ай бұрын
I apply 2,4d in solution with a meat injector tool. Thistle roots can be 18 feet deep.
@jeangray68636 ай бұрын
Great, helpful video, thank you
@MuricaFyea8 ай бұрын
Those weeds produce such a beautiful flower.
@andicarlson58708 ай бұрын
Yes, but it is illegal in most states to let Canada Thistle bloom. It is highly invasive!!!
@dhansonranch8 ай бұрын
It is a tough weed and it's roots go deep which is good in some ways. But it has seeds like crazy. I find that planting potatoes in rows close together so that you have to hill using a hoe does help keep it to a dull roar.... plus shade helps too. I also dig down beside it so I can break it off as deep as possible. Good info!
@NPC2_4_U8 ай бұрын
The constant removal method is what is finally working for me with dollar weed here in the South. Even just pulling emerging leaves where I can't pull the underground vine is working.
@paintboxsoapworks71268 ай бұрын
BIRDSEED OMG. This explains so much about the location of my Canada thistle outbreaks.
@ilovemichigan-11118 ай бұрын
Most of the plants that people consider "weeds" are actually edible and highly nutritional. Canada thistle is one of these. I grow most of these "Weeds" on purpose. They are actually a big part of my herbal garden.
@5points70198 ай бұрын
I was going thru the comments looking for this kind of statement. Wild edibles. It's a good idea to get to know them and may be important to be able to identify them in case of hard times. We have stinging nettles, Virginia creeper, and creeping Charlie that invade every year. I allow the stinging nettle at the back slope behind my fenced portion of yard bcs it is edible, and a great deterrent for people cutting thru my property from the apartments behind us. If it comes under the fence I try to stop it. The creeping Charlie invades the grass, but I do fight it in the garden plots. The Virginia creeper has been the worst issue of all, its all toxic and I've managed to kill it back these last few years, it also grew on the slope behind the fence and was coming up past all my attempts to weed block. I went gang busters on it a few seasons ago, and it has been easier to deal with since. And i forgot to mention the dandelion and clover all over the rest of the grass.... great wild edibles... The definition of a weed is any plant you don't want in a particular location.
@jewelweed74278 ай бұрын
And medicinal as well!!
@jodibraun63838 ай бұрын
You can have mine, free, if you come and dig them yourself! 😂
@bobbadagirl8 ай бұрын
Agreed on some things, but if it's an invasive spreader that's going to easily go outside the garden and crowd out natives.... :/
@williamravisburn26518 ай бұрын
Thistle is mildly toxic to humans snd livestock. The medicinal uses of the toxin(applied in low enough doses to be safe) are not worth the tradeoffs and there are many superior options that do not share the same downsides as cultivating Thistle.
@cindyl76488 ай бұрын
Great video Luke. How do I get rid of wild strawberry plants? They produce little yellow flowers in the spring and small strawberry looking fruit, but it is very bitter. They are taking over my whole yard. They are very hardy and spread quickly. Any suggestions?
@paulmazzola15988 ай бұрын
Fiskars makes an incredible weed remover. You step on it and lift and it comes out, root and all. Works especially good for these weeds. Less good on dandelion.
@arthurvandermark53978 ай бұрын
I have a similar underground weed spreding problem. I've used the vinegar solution. It kills the tops for a while but they come back. Had a bad spot in the lawn which I fixed by mowing for a couple of years. But, the area on s slope is not feasible to mowing for me anyway. I've settled on the idea of trying to change the soil chemistry. I've notice that these weeds don't grow under the pine trees or even near the edges. I was wondering about purchasing pine needle mulch. It will probably take years before it works. Or, I can rake up the pine needles and soak in a large container to eventually water the weeds with my brew? Comments!
@Mandalorian_of_Christ8 ай бұрын
Dandelions are the bane of my yard. Started digging th em out one by one...but as you mentioned...yes I have to get out there everyday because they do the same. Sprout up somewhere else.
@shelliehayden-sauer51928 ай бұрын
Here in the PNW coast it is Bermuda grass, Himalayan Blackberry, salmonberries, and Bindweed. We found out our property line is actually 4 feet further than we originally thought due to these Blackberries and Salmonberries being able to take over the back yard .
@andicarlson58708 ай бұрын
We bought a house after the garden had been left for two summers-the previous owners both died of prolonged illness. Then we did not realize how much a problem Canada Thistle is. Our landscape designer told us to tarp the entire area for three summer months, and patrol the edges daily. Had a heavy tarp down from late September last year, and starting to see the plants come up around the edges. We will see what happens by the end of the summer. We spent last summer digging, but as Luke said, it just comes back stronger.
@MIgardener8 ай бұрын
It comes back stronger until it doesn’t. Keep up on it! :)
@xodroid98534 ай бұрын
I have the same issue. Former owner lived here 10+ years. I bought the house when there was snow cover. Turns out there are tons of flower beds that they were too ill to take care of. I was pregnant when I bought the house. I wasn't really able to do anything about the flower beds for a couple of years. If only Canada thistle were something we could eat exclusively as a food we would be set for life. Our neighbors don't have it. I guess that we got it from the bird feeder based on this video.
@FrozEnbyWolf1508 ай бұрын
The weed that's giving me the biggest problem right now is mugwort. It grows via thick runners, so it's impossible to pull up without disrupting my strawberries. The mugwort was there first, and has been there since before the garden, so I don't know if there's any way to get rid of it without chopping them down every day. Yes, I know mugwort is edible, but it's also quite bitter, and I haven't found a good use for it yet.
@vickisavage89298 ай бұрын
Mugwort is also medicinal.
@spencerseaks38828 ай бұрын
A good soaking rain, leather gloves, pull them out roots and all, if the root broke off I sprayed Round-up in the hole, eventually babies popped up and I gently removed them...Leather Gloves!