Planning for Next Year's Crop of Weeds
Brenda Frick, Ph.D., P.Ag.

Now is the time to consider which weeds will be problems in the coming
year. This will help you devise a strategy to deal with them this spring.
What weeds will this coming year bring? The most reliable prediction about
what weeds to expect comes from looking backwards. Most weeds have some
dormancy, and will continue to come back for several years after an outbreak.
Reviewing field histories will identify the possible candidates for this
year's most wanted list.
If we could predict the weather, we would have a good start on predicting
the weeds, and how well they will grow. Weeds differ in the way that they
respond to temperature. So do crops. The relative difference often determines
which has the advantage. For instance, in a spring when moisture doesn't
come until the ground has warmed up, green foxtail on the surface can
germinate quickly and get ahead of the deep-seeded crops like pea or lentil.
In a cool wet spring, wild oats can be up before most cereal crops. Of
course, some weeds have been up and at it long before seeding. If these
are not set back, they can have a severe impact on the young spring-seeded
crop.
If you know the timing of weeds it is easier to manage them. The following
table gives some useful information. For instance, if wild oats are a
common problem, early season tillage and delayed seeding may control the
first flush of wild oats, and place the crop in the ground when it has
an advantage. If green foxtail is a more likely problem, seeding early
(provided that there is moisture) may allow the crop to get going before
green foxtail can germinate. If the major players are perennial weeds
like Canada thistle, or winter annual weeds like stinkweed, including
winter annual crops like winter wheat or winter rye, biennial cover crops
such as sweet-clover, or perennial forages can provide additional fall
and early spring competition, and help keep those weeds down.

Unfortunately, the adjustments work both ways. For instance, if your
usual practice is to seed as early as possible, you may have pretty good
competition against the weeds that germinate only when the soil warms
up. But you may be favouring weeds that germinate early. You may notice
that, over time, those types of weeds are getting more and more abundant.
Weeds adjust to farm practice whenever it is consistent. By varying your
practice, and especially by using sound crop rotations, you can be sure
that one particular weed pattern will not always have an advantage.
Brenda Frick, Ph.D., P. Ag. is the Prairie Coordinator for the Organic
Agriculture Centre of Canada. In organic systems, as in all of farming, the weeds will always be with
us. Organic weed management is an important focus for me at for the Organic
Agriculture Centre of Canada. I would love to hear about your weed challenges
and successes. Please contact me at 306-966-4975 or via email brenda.frick@usask.ca
This article first appeared in The Western Producer, and is published here on the OACC website with
permission.
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