Popped up in a plot

Tap

Well-Known Member
Never saw this before. What is it?
I planted a 9 way mix that put together from Green Cover Seed.
A few other things that I didn't put in the mix like buckwheat popped a plant here and there but I could identify them. Not this one though. Is it a weed or a crop from an odd seed from the dealer?
Pic on next post...
 
Any ideas?
No browsing on it. The deer were hammering everything else I planted so I guess that's why the Smartweed is doing "well" from lack of competition.
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If that were in AR - it looks a lot like coffee bean or sickle pod - one of the worst weeds there is. Not sure about your neck of the woods
 
If that were in AR - it looks a lot like coffee bean or sickle pod - one of the worst weeds there is. Not sure about your neck of the woods
I'm in SW Pa, zone 6.
I mowed that plot last week in prep for my fall planting in a couple weeks so that weed (?) top is gone. Any problem with the roots still being in the ground?

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Since it's a legume the deer probably eat it. And since the beans are sometimes substituted for coffee you may want to cultivate some to use as coffee after the Armageddon.
 
Since it's a legume the deer probably eat it. And since the beans are sometimes substituted for coffee you may want to cultivate some to use as coffee after the Armageddon.
I don't drink coffee. Can I make beer or wine from it?

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I don't drink coffee. Can I make beer or wine from it?

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The Asians make tea from it. I agree with the others, it's a noxious weed best gotten rid of. But if society ever got in dire straits and things couldn't be bought in the store anymore plants like this would be valuable.
 
Deer don't touch sicklepod in my neck of the woods...and the seeds will live in the soil for many years...almost impossible to get rid of once it's established.
 
Thanks guys.
I wish I could have identified a lot of other nasty stuff years ago when it first showed up on my place. Maybe I could have stayed ahead of things like Mile-a-Minute, Oriental Bittersweet, Grape vines and a few others.
I can't over emphasize how important plant identification is.
 
I got some of that with some soybean seed from my local feed & seed. My biologist couldn't identify it and looked it up. Told me it was an invasive and to get rid of it. I hand pulled a bunch before they seeded out and glyed some others. Went RR beans two years in a row before I got rid of most of it, but I still have one or two pop up now and then. I just pull them up before they seed.
 
Is it prevalent in certain regions? More of a Southern plant for example?
Are any of you in zone 6 or Pa guys dealing with it?

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Tap, the link below will show you the range of sicklepod. I'm glad I don't have it at all. From everything I've read it is a beast.

https://www.researchgate.net/figure...ion-of-sicklepod-Senna-obtusifolia-in-the-USA
Thanks NH. Looks like my state has it. I was hoping it was an inadvertent seed that got into my plot seed. I'll keep an eagle eye out for it. The last thing I need is another invasive.
I guess I can look it up but I'll ask anyway...does it favor a certain type of habitat? Sun only? Does it handle shade?

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Thanks NH. Looks like my state has it. I was hoping it was an inadvertent seed that got into my plot seed. I'll keep an eagle eye out for it. The last thing I need is another invasive.
I guess I can look it up but I'll ask anyway...does it favor a certain type of habitat? Sun only? Does it handle shade?

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It prefers full sun, but would do okay in light shade. Unfortunately it adapts to any type of soil - fertile to poor. In fact, it will grow well in a railroad ballast. Water preference would be slightly dry to slightly moist. Hard to find a place it won't grow well....
 
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