

Chapter 7 was the chapter that our group presented on. In this chapter, we talked about weeds, crop rotation, and cover crops. In the presentation, we talked about what a weed actually is and what type of different weeds there are. Weeds are essentially plants that are growing in inappropriate places. Weeds are pests because they take soil, nutrients from the soil, and crowd crops in your garden. If you use a combination of garden soil, compost, and compost manures, expect to deal with weeds. The roots of the weeds are the important factor among the different types of weeds. Strong rooted weeds have roots that are deeper than four inches in the soil and are harder to remove because of how deep they are in the soil. It is important to remove all traces of the root so the weed doesn't grow back. Crop rotation is important because it reduces the amount of bug infestation. Rotating your crops will confuse bugs and reduce the amount of bugs in your garden. It is important to plan out the rotation of your crops ahead of time so you aren't constantly growing in the same place. Keep a record of the rotation in a gardeners log book. Assign numbers or letters to each crop and area in your garden to keep track and have a rotatable method. Label each section with a small sign. It is also important to rotate within the crop families (Tomato group, Squash group, Mustard group, and the Carrot group). The next really important thing to do is to always have mulch and surround mulch around your crops. Mulch do a really good job of maintaining weed problems, except tough weeds because they are stronger due to their strong and deeply planted roots. Sifting mulch keeps soil from mixing in with it and makes it less attractive for weeds to grow. Weeds can harm your garden and mulch is the best way to prevent that.
