Ronnie Panas: Whichever method you decide to use you MUST remove the weeds, roots and all, before you start or you'll have the same problem again. Preen is my favorite.
Morris Olexy: There's a product called "Preen" that you can incorporate into the soil that prevents weeds from growing. It's safe to use around perrenials and annuals (the desirable plants in your garden). People I know swear by the stuff and put a good dose of it on in the spring and then again do a maintenance sprinkling of it in mid-summer. It's a granual product.
Chris Wilczewski: If you weed the area out very well and use a ground cover such as bark a couple of inches thick it will keep the weeds manageable. If you pick out the weeds as they are just starting it's easy to keep up. The bark keeps the light from germinating the weed seeds.
Lester Haschke: You could use a thick layer of mulch, it will help retain moisture in the soil, keeps the soil/roots cool in summer. Some weeds ! will push through, but not as many, and they're usually easier to pull out too as the root in the mulch and not the soil.
Kenneth Queener: I want a backyard with strictly constrained foliage. this way i'm getting to spend lots extra time indulging in pleasant hobbies there. in spite of everything rummaging in the process the undergrowth doing a David Baily effect is particularly no longer my cup of tea in any respect. I do rather like the belief of ploughing a field now and then nonetheless. that is often great to work out some thing innovations-blowing starting to be in a nicely tended furrow!
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