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I love my vegetable garden, but every spring it looks like the Amazon, and the task of clearing the overgrown weeds is not enjoyable.

One fall, I took cardboard and laid it down over my beds and covered it with straw. The following spring, I lifted the cardboard, and voila, the bed was perfectly prepped and ready for planting. It was glorious.

I have already restarted this process for the remainder of the garden but was hoping to get some alternate strategies. While the cardboard/straw works well (from what I can tell), it:

  1. Costs money... straw isn't as cheap as it used to be
  2. Takes time - collecting cardboard from local stores, flattening it, laying it down to shape
  3. Isn't exactly beautiful, although the straw does take the edge off

I can't help but think I'm not the first person who's had to deal with this. I am very interested in and open to cover crops, but bear in mind my goal is to minimize the work I have to do in the spring, when I am busiest. Do cover crops create work for me in the spring, or do they just die? Aside from cover crops, are there other low-cost strategies I can apply now to control weeds in the spring?

For what it's worth, I've tried burning the weeds in the spring with a propane torch without much success.

Also, two limitations I am bound by (admittedly self imposed):

  1. No tilling -- I have no-till beds, and I am married to the idea
  2. No Artificial chemicals like Round Up -- I'm 100% organic in my veggie garden

I am in North-Central Indiana, zone 5b.

Hambone
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  • just use cardboard and some rocks/soil to wiegh it down. No straw needed. 2. Does collecting and applying cardboard take more time than weeding? 3. Are the weeds more beautiful than the cardboard? We cover crop our gardens with oats or wheat, but they do require tilling under or removal in the spring. We do this by hand.
  • – That Idiot Oct 07 '15 at 13:14