September Gardening
September Gardening - Weeds will be troublesome to the overworked and
the idle gardener, while the best-kept land will be full of seeds blown upon it from the
sluggard's garden, and the first shower will bring them up in terrific force.
All that we have to say about them is that they must be kept down, for they not only
choke the rising crops in seed-beds and spoil the look of everything, but they very much
tend to keep the ground damp and cold, when, if they were away, it would get dry and warm,
to the benefit of all the proper crops upon it. Neglect will make the task of eradication
simply terrible, and, in the meantime, every crop on the ground will suffer.
The two great months for weeds are May and September; but often the September weeds
triumph, because the mischief they do is not then so obvious to the casual eye. As there
are now many used-up crops that may be cleared away, large quantities of Cabbage, Endive,
Lettuce, and even thinnings of Spinach may be planted out to stand the winter.
Source: The Culture of Vegetables and Flowers From Seeds and Roots, 16th Edition
1921, Sutton and Sons