Can geranium be confused with buttercup?
Actually, I'm sure I'm being hired to weed geraniums. But the client thinks it's buttercup.
How do I tell the difference? Buttercup leaves should be rather rounded and difficult to confuse with stork's foot. Or am I wrong?
To what extent does it make sense to weed either of these herbs in the vegetable garden? (Especially when you have about 100 plants per square meter.)
Thank you very much.
In the Gemuese garden, both plants are probably unconscious hinds.
Some differences over the year easy to distinguish, now I would wait a bit of exaggeration if you are not sure … look at images on the Internet, send my own, then I can help you …. I could naturally explain more …
I don’t know how strawberries are known at Storchschnabel
Storchschnabel has no yellow blues
The name says it…
Some stork beaks (e.g. pelargonium maccorrhizum and their varieties) have an intense odor when rubbing the blaetters)
No, not really.
Hahnenfuss is one of the rinks. Butterflower, everyone knows their yellow flowers on meadows. Their relatives and their relatives are their own round seeds when the petals fall off.
Strochschnabel belongs to the Geranien, never blossoms yellow. Seeds resemble a stork beak.
In fact, they are difficult to recognize on leaves without flowering. At location conditions and smell you can recognize them. Rub tap foot between fingers and stork beak – you notice this difference.
The differences between the stork beak and the cock base are actually quite clear. Especially when you use botany or Plants/herbs often have to do, one knows the species.
Storchschnabel species look like…
… and tap foot types are, for example, the following…
If a part of the garden is to be used as a vegetable beet, it makes sense in any case; even if a quantity of one hundred plants per square meter is quite a job. In order to successfully ask, it is recommended to to loosen the floor – for example, with Hacks or Garden claw. Thus, the roots can also be removed as much as possible on one piece.
Greetings.
I’m sure it’s possible, but it’s not if you know each other.
In the vegetable beet, not too many unwanted plants should grow.
It makes no sense at such a high density to pluck the plants and then possibly to remove and dispose of the beet with the attached earth. It takes away the best soil and reduces the humus content in the soil.
So it only helps to hack, unless it comes to root weeds, i.e. plants that multiply over rhizomes and the like.
Especially in the case of cock feet there are species that multiply via egressors. I’d remove it first.
There are both different types of tap foot as well as the stork beak
Of course, it makes sense to ask thoroughly! if you want to harvest vegetables
The whole surrounding forest is full of storks! I guess it’s enough to chop when the vegetables get into the bed. Fighting doesn’t seem to me efficient and, in addition, I think Storchschnabel is still a disproportionately not quite as problematic herb in the garden as what else could come. I read this morning that some people even cultivate him to displace the delicious yummy.
Storchschnabel is very art-dependent, there are some very stubborn (which I also planted under the hedges to displace the Giersch). For example, Geranium rupertianum I find unproblematic.
Hahnenfuss can be a very ugly weed, because it forms foothills and it can be done well at any time of year, especially if other things aren’t here yet.