• Podcast
  • Instagram
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
Menu

Laetitia Maklouf

Gardening in Five Minutes a Day
  • Podcast
  • Instagram
  • About
  • Blog
  • Contact
weeds

My weeding method: How to clear away weeds from your flowerbeds

February 11, 2020

I begin this post with the very real thought that I need to shut up and not teach my granny to suck eggs, but please be assured that even though this post LOOKS like I’m trying to tell you how to pull a plant that you don’t like out of the soil, it’s really NOT about that at all. Instead, I want to share the way I weed, because it has make things so much more manageable for me, and is therefore, I feel, worth setting out in writing.

Let’s begin with the obvious; a weed being any plant that we don’t want in our space, usually because it is stealing light and nutrients and space from other more beloved specimens. Some weeds are easy to remove (chickweed can just be pulled out with a slight tug) and some are very much more challenging (dandelions or need digging out carefully in order to extract that amazing taproot..couch grass is a similar thing but you must chase it all over the place before removing it). Before you weed with impunity though, it’s worth having a quick word with yourself about your motivations. Are you weeding it out because the RECEIVED wisdom is that it shouldn’t be there because someone, somewhere LABELLED it as a weed? Herb robert is a great example of this - a beautiful thing and perfect ground cover, easy to remove when it gets too much and often just ripped out willy nilly when it could just be left to beautify your space. Do check out Jack Wallinton’s wonderful book ‘Wild About Weeds’ for more mind-changing stuff on the subject.

So once you’re sure you’ll be a discerning weeder, it’s time to get going.

My method is really really simple, but you may not have thought of doing it before, because it’s easy to be distracted (and overwhelmed) by the entire garden. My kit is always the same:

  1. A kneeler

  2. A widger

  3. A pair of secataurs

  4. A wide shallow plastic tray

  5. A trug

  6. Gardening gloves

  7. My favourite podcast

First: Instead of looking at your whole space then, just pick one small area, no bigger than a metre square. If you need to, put a couple of bamboo canes down horizontally, or use a child’s hula-hoop to give you some boundaries.

Next: Start weeding within your hoop or square and - crucially - DO NOT LOOK OUTSIDE THOSE BOUNDARIES. Weed with care and love and attention until every inch of the small patch in front of you is clear of anything you don’t want. This might also mean that you get out your secateurs and chop away dead stuff, or prune out things you don’t want, depending on the time of year. The point is that you are WEEDING OUT the rubbish and putting it all in the same place. I use a wide shallow plastic tray and a basket. In the tray I put anything that can be composted (most of what I remove) and anything which I don’t want to put in the compost (perennial weeds or seed heads) I put in the basket for the bin or burning.

Then: Once I’ve finished the area in front of me and it’s perfect and gorgeous, I move on to the next square metre. In this way I can work systematically without getting distracted by the enormity of the job at hand, and enjoy myself in the process.

I always start weeding not wanting to do it, and thinking I’ll just do five minutes. I also ALWAYS do more than I thought I would achieve, and I put this success down to not being distracted by the rest of the garden.

I hope that was helpful - it certainly helps me!

x Laetitia

← Basil from seed...Quick topiary for valentine's day →
Blog RSS

Latest Posts

Featured
twine in a teapot
Sep 18, 2020
Strings and things - my favourite hacks and clever products for tying things in.
Sep 18, 2020
Sep 18, 2020
IMG_0766.jpg
Sep 11, 2020
What's on my terrace: Five plants for low-maintenance, textural bliss
Sep 11, 2020
Sep 11, 2020
garden of vegan cover.jpg
May 20, 2020
Book review: The Garden of Vegan by Cleve West
May 20, 2020
May 20, 2020
snippers.jpg
May 12, 2020
The Chelsea Chop
May 12, 2020
May 12, 2020
aphids.jpg
Apr 21, 2020
How to control aphids
Apr 21, 2020
Apr 21, 2020

My newsletter is much more personal than my blog - it’s where I document exactly what I’ve been doing in my own garden each day and it pops into inboxes on a Saturday or Sunday. People say it gets them motivated to get out there and do a bit of gardening which is brilliant! If you want it, just put your email in the box below, and know that I will NEVER share you details with anyone, EVER. x

Sign up to the newsletter

I do a weekly newsletter full of five minute gardening tips and there's usually a special project too. It’s much more personal than my blog, and subscribers say it gets them motivated to get out there and do a bit of gardening which is brilliant! If you want it, then put your email below, and know that I will NEVER share your details with anyone else x

Sign up to the newsletter