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by Kim Wilkinson and Craig Elevitch
AgroForester
PO Box 428, Holualoa, HI 96725 USA
Tel: 808-324-4427, Fax: 808-324-4129
http://www.agroforestry.net
Copyright 1998
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How to get started in this thick mat of weedy trees? What to do about all the huge clumping grasses in the pineapple patch? How to manage this morning glory vine strangling the orchard? I have had a lot of questions come up in the course of working in permaculture in Hawai'i, for myself on my own projects and from people I meet who are working toward sustainability. Whenever I get myself into a muddle about how to handle weeds, I remember my weed motto: If You Can't Eat Them, Succeed Them! The function of weeds on the farm Weeds support diverse soil microlife Weeds control erosion and conserve water Weeds provide insect habitat, and encourage birds Weeds are a source of food and medicine for people Weeds provide food for crop plants Weeds are a source of food for animals Succeed the weeds The weeds are taking the land the same direction I want it to go, towards more diversity, stability, and abundance. It is counterproductive to focus on fighting weeds, since after all they have the land's best interest at heart. Besides, I can't win. They have been excelling in the process of succession for many more generations than I have. In the natural process of succession, weeds establish where they find a place, usually in open or partially open conditions, especially on bare soil. They modify the environment, eventually making the area inhospitable (too shady, etc.) to more of their kind. Other plants come in who thrive in the modified conditions, and the process of succession continues until the ecosystem is more or less stable, usually culminating in a closed-canopy forest. Most of the plants that I call weeds are involved in the primary stages of natural succession. They are medicine for the soil, repairing it and revitalizing life. Succeeding weeds is about stepping-up the process of succession. I don't try to stop or arrest the process the weed is involved in; I speed it up. For example, introducing fast-growing trees like nitrogen fixing trees can alter the environment, making groundlayer weed growth slow or even stop with shade. Filling the space with the trees and plants I want will leave less room for weeds. Some of the most aggressive weeds need full sun and low fertility to thrive; by increasing shade, organic matter and soil health they will disappear. As a last resort, or in areas where the weeds are just too overwhelming, I may need to take a step back in the succession process. This may involve sheet mulching with a thick weed barrier once, baring the soil once, or even spraying herbicide to kill grasses one time. But I have to remember that this is a step back from the natural process of things, and the next step is the weed's turn. Unless I want to be involved in a tedious two-step (I remove weeds, they come back, I remove weeds, they come back) for the rest of my farming career, I need to take two steps forward immediately after taking the one step back. This means mulching and filling the space with appropriate plants (groundcovers, crop trees and other vegetation), creating a healthy system with no room and no need for voracious weeds to modify it. Using this approach in the case of the citrus tree, I hand-pull, smother, or herbicide the bunch grass once, mulch the tree, then introduce a living groundcover vine to fill the area where the grass was encroaching. I could at the same time interplant with shade trees, as citrus like a little shade and grass does not. Farming in the tropics does not need to be a routine; it can be an evolution, an upward spiral. That is how I know I'm doing it right; when it is easier for me with each passing season. Take the weed's lead References and further reading: Facciola, Stephen. Cornucopia: A Source Book of Edible Plants. 1990. Kampong Publications, 1870 Sunrise Drive, Vista, CA 92084 USA. |
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