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Organic Gardens : What are Some Natural Herbicides?
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 Message 1 of 3 in Discussion 
From: Rene  (Original Message)Sent: 11/9/2006 12:46 AM
 

What are Some Natural Herbicides?

There are a number of natural pesticides available to gardeners for insect control, but relatively few natural herbicides for the eradication of weeds or other invasive plants. What natural herbicides do exist can do more harm than good if applied under the wrong conditions. However, there are plants that act as natural herbicides, such as black walnut, sunflowers, sagebrush and spotted knapweed. These plants excrete chemicals that can kill off another plant species growing nearby. The process of certain plants acting as natural herbicides is called allelopathy.

Researchers are very interested in the allelopathic qualities of plants, since the chemicals responsible for natural herbicides can often be isolated and refined for commercial use. For example, scientists were able to extract an herbicidal chemical called catechin from the roots of spotted knapweed, an invasive weed found in the western United States. This chemical can be synthesized on a larger scale and applied to a number of other invasive plants. Many natural herbicides are selective, which means that their chemicals only kill specific plants, not everything they touch.

Another popular species of natural herbicide <http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-herbicide.htm> is the black walnut tree. The oils extracted from the leaves of black walnut trees are often used in commercially-produced natural herbicides. Extracts of chemicals found in sunflowers may also be used as natural herbicides for gardeners working organically.

Other natural herbicides are used primarily to control weed growth in commercial turf, such as golf courses and installed lawns. These natural herbicides are considered pre-emergent, which means that they destroy other plants at the germination stage, before the plant can establish roots. One such natural herbicide is corn gluten meal. Corn gluten meal was originally developed as a medium for growing fungus, but researchers discovered that it also inhibits the germination of other plants, especially weeds and grasses. Corn gluten meal is usually applied to lawns during the germination phase, weeks before the first blade of grass or weed stem appears.

Research to discover more natural herbicides is ongoing. Some agriculture experts have observed allelopathic phenomena in common crop plants such as winter rye and wheat straw. Rye plants have been known to affect the growth of certain vegetables, for example. Some researchers believe that a cover crop of rye, or at least a covering mulch <http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-mulch.htm> containing rye, could work as a natural herbicide between soybean crops. Grain-based natural herbicides could be modified to kill off invasive plants while sparing the important crop plants.

Natural herbicides may sound more appealing than their chemical counterparts, but they are still poisonous substances that can affect humans and livestock. The application of natural herbicides may require the same safety precautions as applying commercial herbicides, so never confuse the term 'organic' with 'non-toxic'.

From: http://www.wisegeek.com/what-are-some-natural-herbicides.htm

 



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 Message 2 of 3 in Discussion 
From: ReneSent: 11/9/2006 12:47 AM
 
 
Protect Your Garden the Organic Way
 

Common garden pests can be treated safely with organic pest control measures.

Avoiding chemical pesticides in your home lawn and garden is a great step to ensuring the health and safety of your family, pets, neighborhood, and the earth!

By the time you notice holes in leaves, weak stalks, and rotten fruit, pests have already won the battle with that plant in your garden. Understanding pests�?lifecycles and habits and using smart gardening strategies will prepare you to prevent pest damage before it happens. We have also gathered non-chemical solutions for dealing with a pest after it has already made a home in your lawn or garden.

http://www.organicgardenpests.com/index.html

 


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 Message 3 of 3 in Discussion 
From: ReneSent: 11/9/2006 12:48 AM

 

Why is it Important to Control Pests the Organic Way ?


Often we react to seeing weeds or pests by immediately applying chemicals, or even apply chemicals as prevention.

Exposure to pesticides has been linked to a long list of diseases and health problems: Parkinson’s, infertility, cancer, birth defects, encephalitis, and lymphoma, just to name a few. Another problem is that the law does not require companies to test lawn pesticides with the same standards as pesticides used on commercially-grown food. Many of these contact hidden "inert ingredients" that have never been tested for possible harm. The Center for Disease Control http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/pesticides has documented cases of farmworker illness after exposure to pesticides.

In addition to the harm they can do to us humans, pesticides contaminate the air, water, soil, plants, and animals around us. For example, many studies have proven that pesticides harm honeybees, butterflies, ladybugs (which eat lots of other pests), and fish, and that lawn chemicals seep into the water table.

Besides that, they can be expensive!

Learning to combat pests without chemicals is a great way to help your health and that of your neighbors and the environment.

An important thing to consider is that healthy organic soil is an easy way to reduce pests in the first place. Plants tend to thrive in an organically rich environment, which helps them fight off pests on their own. If you don't already have one or more compost bins http://www.cleanairgardening.com/accessories.html for composting at home, get one. It also wouldn't hurt to have a compost pail to keep near the kitchen sink to collect vegetable scraps conveniently.

http://www.organicgardenpests.com/organicpestcontrol.html