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New presence in my Beaver Island lawn #754430

Asked June 07, 2021, 9:27 AM EDT

Can you please identify this a recommend a method of elimination? Haven't had this weed in 14 years of living here. Home wasn't occupied this winter and with little to no snow deer yarded up here and browsed most of our shrubs leaving behind a great amount of deer feces. Soil is predominantly sand, only used dandelion / crabgrass herbicide occasionally. Any advice is appreciated. Thomas Kludt, Class of 73.

Charlevoix County Michigan

Expert Response

Could you send two more clearer images with something in the background for scale, please - More close up than the last - Thank You!!

An Ask Extension Expert Replied June 07, 2021, 2:23 PM EDT
Here you go.

On Mon, Jun 7, 2021, 2:23 PM Ask Extension <<personal data hidden>> wrote:
The Question Asker Replied June 07, 2021, 4:35 PM EDT

Hello Thomas,

Every spring, some obnoxious or annoying weed becomes a big pest in many yards and gardens. Andy Warhol’s statement made long ago could also be applied to weeds: “They all get their 15 minutes of fame.” Some magic confluence of temperatures and rainfall has favored it over all the other weeds residing in many yards.

For many gardeners, this spring has brought an invader that seems supercharged and has popped up in many garden beds and areas that are not managed. It has many common names such as bedstraw, cleavers, catchweed bedstraw, sticky-weed, or sticky-willie, to name just a few. Its botanical name is Galium aparine. If you have ever fought with it, you will remember it, even if you didn’t know its name.

Bedstraw produces small, white flowers followed by much small fruit that contain two seeds each. The round, green fruit and seeds are also prickly cling-tights. It is very easy for people or animals to pick up a load of hitchhiking seeds and transport them to a new area. The leaf layout is distinctive. The six to eight narrow, green leaves are arranged in whorls around the stem.

Because bedstraw gallops over and around all surrounding plants, there is no herbicide that can be used safely. The only option is the gardener’s usual “seek and destroy” of pulling and bagging it up. Luckily, it is shallowly rooted. The only good part is that the prickly plants can be shaped into a ball and lobbed out of the bed. If bedstraw is composted, the seeds will survive. It may be necessary to put it in a black, plastic bag, add a little water, and lay the closed bag in the sun with the intention of steaming the seeds into submission.

Keep in mind that bedstraw can grow in the late spring and fall, too. So be on the lookout for this grabby weed and pull it when it is small. And remember that next year, another weed will have its moment of fame.

From the article: Bedstraw is stuck on you - Gretchen Voyle, Michigan State University Extension - June 1, 2012 at this link: https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/bedstraw_is_stuck_on_you

An Ask Extension Expert Replied June 07, 2021, 6:05 PM EDT
Yuk! Many thanks for the information and adbice. Thomas

On Mon, Jun 7, 2021, 6:05 PM Ask Extension <<personal data hidden>> wrote:
The Question Asker Replied June 07, 2021, 9:10 PM EDT

You are welcome - Have a great day!!

An Ask Extension Expert Replied June 08, 2021, 4:19 PM EDT

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