Get Your Ounce of (Weed Seed) Prevention This Fall

As the growing season winds down, it can be tempting to take your foot off the gas and coast into winter, leaving weed management in the rear view mirror. 

But don’t forget that mirror’s warning – weed seeds are closer than they appear this time of year! They lurk not just in your soils, but in your grain silos, your ditches, hay bales, and wedged inside your equipment, including tractors, sprayers, mowers, combines, trucks, trailers, cultivators and even manure spreaders. 

GROW’s Prevention webpage takes readers through the nitty gritty details of where and how weed seeds embed themselves into the very fabric of a farm each year. An image of a grain farm and livestock operation are broken into puzzle pieces – click on each one to learn about how to flush seeds out of the best hiding spots on each kind of operation. 

Just click on each section of the farm or livestock operation to see how weed seeds spread there.

The page hits on each of these potential weed seed refuges – as well as many more:  

  • Birds: Did you know many species of birds can eat and then transport viable seeds in their digestive tracks? 
  • Irrigation or Rainwater: Some seeds are specifically designed to raft their way to a new life in a new field. 
  • Manure: Seeds can be found both in manure and on the spreaders that apply it. 
  • Bales: Baling gathers up any seeds present in the field at haying time. 
  • Grain: Likewise, weed seeds often join grain in combines, trailers and silos.
  • Tillage equipment: Weed seeds can easily hitch a ride on cultivators and other tillage implements. 
  • Planters: Planters are full of fun hiding spots for weed seeds, like disk openers and gauge wheels. 
  • Combines: Likewise, combines are famous for turning into weed seed spreading machines in the fall. 
  • Mowers: Let the picture below speak a thousand words about the ability of mowers to move seeds to greener pastures. 
Weed seeds — some having germinated — hitch a ride across the farm on a mower deck. (Photo credit: Michael Flessner, Virginia Tech)

While growers can’t control all these factors, there are ways to clean out equipment and silos. Pay special attention to combines this time of year, and consider using ‘The Straw Bale Methodology” for deep cleaning those hard-to-catch weed seeds, shown in the video below: 

Do you have any tried-and-true systems for de-weeding your operation each fall? Let us know!


Article by Emily Unglesbee, GROW; header image by Claudio Rubione, GROW