Weeding Techniques

heirloomgal

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Wow, never thought of Amaranth as a weed
Aside from maybe mint, it is the WORST aggressive vegetable I've ever planted. Worse than tuberous sunflowers, which are bad, thistles, dandelions, purslane, plantain, horsetail. The seeds last forever in the soil. Takes years to get them all to sprout so you can hoe each plant.
 

ducks4you

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I Love aggressive turnips!!! They scatter thousands of little seeds, fill in places where the weeds want to grow, if you forget about them they grow 3 ft tall and make More seeds, AND you can pull them out of the ground any ole time you please.
Turnip dreams...
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digitS'

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If it is a vegetable amaranth then we are probably not talking about
Love-lies-bleeding
Prince's Feather
Joseph's-coat
or, farther afield to Celosia and Gomphrena.

Those are probably all edible. More traditional edibles include grain amaranth and, farther afield, spinach, chard and beets.

Some in the family are considered weeds. Several of those are native to North America and thrive in disturbed soil so they can invade farm fields. An example is redroot pigweed, invasive but native. Of course, since there is a market for grain amaranth and amaranth flour, Cooperative Extension has advice for farmers wanting to grow it as a crop

Steve
 

Moon888

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Not sure where I found this tip for pulling carrots so I can't credit the original source-- but after breaking off many carrots I discovered that this technique actually works on all but really, really long carrots. First you push down firmly on the shoulders of the carrot, plunging it about 1/2" into the ground; this action severs the fine feeder roots that anchor the carrot in the soil. Next you grab the green top growth nice and low down, and gently pull the carrot straight up. It is remarkable how easy it is in most cases. One extra step, but I find that it sure makes a difference. 🥕
Thanks for the tip : )
 
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