How to return pigweed to the soil before it makes seed?
I’m of the opinion, perhaps mistakenly, that the site of my Pigweed infestation is the richest dirt on the place. It’s certainly the blackest. Old spot where they fed hay.
You’re hitting on something I’ve been trying to understand. I see many folks recommend that the first planting of a throw and mow regime be preceded by burning off the dead vegetation in order to allow better seed-soil contact. This makes sense on the surface, but does not jive with the idea of providing thatch to decompose. This is answered by people saying that there is good thatch and bad thatch. That which decomposes too slowly may have been better off as fuel for a fire. I’m left to believe that thatch from fall plots is never “bad thatch” because I never hear of anyone using fire to get rid of it before the next crop.We shouldn't clump all the native "prairie" or field species together and label them all as "weeds". A weed is any plant growing where we don't want it to be....not any plant that isn't store bought. If you're on a year round program where you plant summer and winter then you could call the things that come from the seed bank "weeds" if you didn't want them competing with your planted crops. Hopefully you're planting a well rounded rotation. However, if your just planting fall cereal grain plots and such then you shouldn't look at the native summer species with the same eye as the year round cropper. They are not just all "weeds". I don't do much of squat in the summer anymore. Right now I have between 25-30 different native summer species growing in my field and probably 15-20 of those are being hammered by the deer. It a nice balanced mix of grasses and broadleafs with a smattering of legumes. Its producing loads of organic matter in a nice balanced mix that won't bog down the system. Its providing the deer with tons of quality forage and its also protecting and recycling my nutrient bank that I've built up over the last 8-9 years. We've all come a long ways in changing our mindset since this whole movement began....and most anyone participating in this thread likely see planting food plots in a whole different light than they did in the past.....but generally speaking we've still not come around to seeing the whole picture with "weed" and native plant specie management. Many still look at it the same way they always have even though they see much of the other aspects of foodplotting with a completely different perspective.
If you've got that much duff, gear your planting towards small seeds that can get down further, or things that find a way no matter what. Things like rape, PTT, annual clover, perennial clover, and winter rye. Something like rye can reach for soil if left off the soil.Thanks. No, no. I know well the difference. Fire is what I’ve seen recommended as a starter, to ensure seed-soil contact. Grant Woods in his interview on Wired to Hunt podcast recently, as one example. QDMA’s (gag) YouTube vid about TnM as another.
I guess my primary question then is ... how important is ensuring seed-soil contact. Because if more thatch, duff is better, it does hurt potential for seed-soil interaction. Should one be concerned with that?
If you have a lot standing thatch and are worried about it add some more seed. With that said it's been my experience that seed will find it's way to the ground rather easily. More thatch is better than not enough thatch.Thanks. No, no. I know well the difference. Fire is what I’ve seen recommended as a starter, to ensure seed-soil contact. Grant Woods in his interview on Wired to Hunt podcast recently, as one example. QDMA’s (gag) YouTube vid about TnM as another.
I guess my primary question then is ... how important is ensuring seed-soil contact. Because if more thatch, duff is better, it does hurt potential for seed-soil interaction. Should one be concerned with that?
Have any of you ever done throw and mow with an old brassica plot? It’s been a few years but I’m going to put a brassica plot in a month or so, for some more late season forage. In past years I ended up with brassicas flowering in spring and I’ve always worked the ground to stop them from going to seed. Could I mow them after they flower to stop them from going to seed again? Or would I need to spray them with gly before they flower and then later throw and mow?
It depends on what you want to plant next and the timing. I've let brassica plots flower and go to seed before. It wasn't a problem because I just nuked it with gly before spreading my next crop. I guess what I'm saying is that I don't find brassicas invasive and even if they do put down a bunch of seed it doesn't show up as a problem later. I don't know what would happen if you mowed them while bolted, some plants just send up more stems with more flowers and others die after mowing... not sure where brassica's fall. The only thing I would be concerned about is mowing down my thatch and not giving the plot enough time to grow more before my next planting. Hope this helps.
"Not enough time to grow"... I was referring to the possibility that you could mow your plot, then spray it a couple of weeks later before it had grown back much. In my experience thatch is priority #1 in this system. It doesn't matter if it gets laid down, mowed down, rollered down, or is left standing... thatch above the seed is important.Thanks for the reply Cat. One question, I wasn't sure what you meant by not giving the plot enough time to grow. If I did this next spring, I would probably put down beans and clover with some oats and if I got a good stand, I would leave it alone for a year. If I don't get a good stand, or the deer simply hammer everything too hard, I would follow beans/clover/oats with a fall plot of wr/clover.
Ok, I can see how my original question could be taken that way. I was only planning on mowing once right after I broadcast seed. I was just asking if I should spray a couple weeks before I mow."Not enough time to grow"... I was referring to the possibility that you could mow your plot, then spray it a couple of weeks later before it had grown back much. In my experience thatch is priority #1 in this system. It doesn't matter if it gets laid down, mowed down, rollered down, or is left standing... thatch above the seed is important.
Yes, spray a couple of weeks before broadcasting and mowing. Sometimes you need to spray again at planting time (if you missed some spots or maybe have a fresh crop of grasses come up).Ok, I can see how my original question could be taken that way. I was only planning on mowing once right after I broadcast seed. I was just asking if I should spray a couple weeks before I mow.
"Not enough time to grow"... I was referring to the possibility that you could mow your plot, then spray it a couple of weeks later before it had grown back much. In my experience thatch is priority #1 in this system. It doesn't matter if it gets laid down, mowed down, rollered down, or is left standing... thatch above the seed is important.
Im still trying to "perfect" the art of TnM. My issue was that I left my oats/rye up until after I seeded then went in to knock them down absolutely nothing grew, not one thing. Im assuming the thatch in that case was too thick. I did do some brassicas that came in well in a different plot that didnt have the standing dead rye.