Juniper2 ah, autumn!

celebrate the mundane (read all 2 entries…)
Celebrating Weeds! 11 months ago

What could be more mundane or less appreciated than weeds, the ones that you see by the roadside, or popping up among your cultivated flowers? Some folks with lawns even poison the weeds, to take control over nature.

From nature’s point of view, which I will assume while I write this entry, there are no weeds; only a wide diversity of plants adapted to a certain habitat. They spread their seeds and runners, waiting for an opening in the soil. A garden or plowed field, or a burnt-over area, is like an open scar in the earth’s covering. If it is not planted by humans, or colonized by weeds, the soil would soon erode by wind and rainfall. The plants’ roots anchor the soil, while the foliage gives shelter to colonies of insects and small animals. Mammals graze on their foliage. Weeds are an important link in the web of life.

Weeds are also the ancestors of all our food crops. Beginning with wild grasses, seed pods, berries, etc., humans have selected, over thousands of years, the plants we cultivate today. Medicinal and culinary herbs also originated in the wild, and can be found there today, if their original habitat still exists.

Even so-called ‘weed trees’ have a function in the forest, where they spring up quickly after a fire or clearcut. They hold the soil while the slower growing species become re-established. Poplar, for example, is often called a weed tree because its wood has little commercial value to humans, yet it can fix nitrogen in the soil for the other species. The bark of young poplar trees is eaten by beavers. Poplar is part of the cycle of forest renewal.

I think it’s fine to pull weeds out of the garden, or cultivate a field. I also think it’s equally good to honor the wild plants in nature, even when we don’t think we benefit from their existence. Indirectly, we do benefit. We are all part of the one great interconnected web.



Comments:

cia007 is packing as she watches the economy unfold!

The trouble with perfect lawns

Excellent post. This is precisely why I have chosen to let my lawn go natural with only spot control for dandelions as needed. I have a healthy crop of clover growing, and with the great bee die-off this year had the pleasure of seeing thousands of healthy happy active honey bees harvesting the clover nectar this summer from my front lawn. When people dump poison into their lawns, it goes into the worms and bugs and into the ground water, ending up in the food chain. When I see a robin pulling a juicy worm out of some neighbor’s oversprayed lawn I cringe to think of the cocktail that bird is getting.

Your post also reminds me of an old pioneer journal of folks who came out of the Blue Mountains in Oregon starving…the Native Americans couldn’t understand this fact, and they shook their heads in disbelief saying, “but you just came out of the BLUE MOUNTAINS!” The Blue Mountains for them was chocked full of food.

Some “weeds” we have yet to find a purpose for, but just because we haven’t found them doesn’t mean they don’t exist!

Juniper2 ah, autumn!

Bravo

on your natural lawn with all its foraging bees.

I wish our culture had as much respect and understanding of nature as the indigenous peoples had.

From what I understand, dandelions are weeds…but I’ve never really cared. I picked them and called them flowers when I was little, and I still don’t get it when people dig up half their yard and spray poison everywhere trying to get rid of them.

Weeds, as you have noted, serve a purpose. And some, like dandelions, can be quite pretty.

This is great

and so true. I haven’t much else to say other than that I appreciate this. Go weeds! (though admittedly I do pull up the occasional thistle from the lawn, ‘cause they’re a real ouch on the feet!) (:

gorillagal3 is really stressed out and needing a break

dandylions!

my grandfather used to make a dandylion wine, out of dandylions i would help pick for him. that was funny!—he’d pay us a dollar for every pound of dandylions we brought him home. do you know how difficult it is for a little kid to pick a pound of dandylions?
Grandpa died before i was ever old enough to taste his wine.

anyway, i like your post.

Juniper2 ah, autumn!

ah, dandylions...

What a nice memory of your grandfather. I imagine it would take a lot of blossoms to make a pound. It’s a lovely image, of children surrounded by golden flowers… so colorful… and picking huge baskets full.

My mother-in-law used to ask my daughters and their cousins to pick dandylions for her wine. They would come home with their clothing and arms stained brown up to the elbows, from the milky sap of the stems. Their Granny paid them in homemade cookies. Her wine was very nice.

Dandylions are indeed wonderful plants. I don’t know how to make wine, but I do eat the greens in the spring.

Sundays Child ~ Faith, Hope and Love is selecting clothes for Discardia!

Who made THAT rule?

Who decided that a beautiful yellow dandelion is a weed, while a yellow rose or yellow tulip is prized? A yellow buttercup is a weed, but not as bad as a dandelion? LOL Who made up these rules anyway???

Juniper2 ah, autumn!

yes, what IS beauty?

I wonder if the ‘rule’ might have started when garden flowers became a commodity that was bought and sold? I mean, who would pay money for plants which they could dig up from the roadside, or which was already growing wild in their yard? So the rare or exotic plants are promoted as ‘beautiful’ , while we are conditioned to despise the abundance of hardy native plants. I think our society’s concept of personal beauty is similar… focusing on the rare and extreme, and overlooking the natural beauty of the average… all in order to sell us ‘stuff’ that makes us look like someone else!


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