Groundsel and Bitter cress, blooming.
Bitter Cress is blooming
right now (late March) all over the county. You won't get a better chance to
eliminate it from your yard than the next few weeks -- though a few plants can
sprout and bloom all summer, right up to late fall. While it is blooming, they
are relatively easy to see by their tiny white four-petal flowers, though the
smallest plants are not obvious; some are as tiny as a half-inch wide and 1.5
inches tall, fully seeded out. The largest are 6 inches wide across the basal
leaves with numerous stalks up to 18 inches tall seeded out. They are easiest
to pull when they have started to develop seed pods.
Seeded bitter cress, bright and ugly, and actually harder to pull than when green.
They become a nearly
invisible green mist when all the flowers are finished, but as they turn yellow
and dry, they become an eyesore, as well as popping their seeds up to three
feet in all directions at the slightest disturbance of the pods. By this time,
seed control is impossible; all one can do is pull the dry stalks and resolve
to do better next year.
Young bitter cress.
Other mustard family
plants, most of them with yellow flowers, are also starting to bloom. The
flowers are pretty, but you want to pull them before they seed out if you don't
want more of them next year. Mustards don't spread by wind, and if you don't
use unfiltered irrigation water, you can eliminate them over a few years by
pulling them in flower.
Young groundsel
Another weed that is
blooming right now, and quickly blowing out and spreading to your neighbors'
yards or from them is groundsel. It is a composite flower of the same family as
dandelion and wild lettuce and not pretty, much like a miniature wild lettuce,
up to a foot tall, with squared-off leaves; the flowers are yellow, do not open
fully, and bend over while they are in bloom, straightening as they form seed.
It is the first blowing weed of the season, blooming in empty lots all over
town. It's easy to pull when in bloom.
Groundsel seeding in a ditch
Dandelions are also
starting to bloom. A famous gardener once said that if dandelions were rare and
hard to grow, they would be a prized flower. Their dead-heads don't even look
bad, and they can be tasty greens before they bloom-but once buds start to form
in the base, they turn quite bitter.
Dandelions are equally easy
to pull before and after blooming: not easy at all unless your soil is loose
from generous mulching with compost or leaves. With big tap roots like these in
tight soil, it's best to stick a shovel in next to the root, loosen, and then
pull. Wild lettuce (not blooming yet) is easier to pull when in bloom, as it
puts up a handy flower stalk and has shallower roots, but it is not a strong
stalk, and you have to grab the base.
Gardening
is growing plants where you want them to grow, not where they want to grow.
Many a pretty flower shows itself to be a weed unless kept under tight control,
and that goes double for flowers that cast their seeds to the wind.
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