Rhodie Ranch
Garden Master
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2009
- Messages
- 3,598
- Reaction score
- 6,006
- Points
- 333
- Location
- Southern Washington State, 8b
LOVE LOVE LOVE parsnips. Never been able to grow them tho.
I probably picked several thousand of those out of my garlic bed. Too small to use though - and I had no intention of allowing them to get bigger & choke out the garlic. Apparently the soil I had brought in for that bed was heavily contaminated with seed. Guess I'll have to add lamb's quarter to the list of weeds introduced to my gardens by contaminated soil or mulch. I'm still dealing with ragweed & shepherd's purse from previous batches of contaminated hay.View attachment 57644
Lamb's Quarter - one of Mother Nature's nutritional powerhouses often overlooked.
I probably picked several thousand of those out of my garlic bed. Too small to use though - and I had no intention of allowing them to get bigger & choke out the garlic. Apparently the soil I had brought in for that bed was heavily contaminated with seed. Guess I'll have to add lamb's quarter to the list of weeds introduced to my gardens by contaminated soil or mulch. I'm still dealing with ragweed & shepherd's purse from previous batches of contaminated hay.
I actually enjoy lamb's quarter as a cooked green (in spite of the digestive issues). But the worst thing that can happen is that I allow a plant or two to go to seed - because then the plant population would be an insurmountable challenge to continued gardening. DW & I went through that with the ragweed & crab grass infestation, and it took two years of enormous & persistent labor to knock it down to a tolerable level. If something like that were to happen now, I would be unable to defeat it alone, and would just abandon that garden to grass.