From: rreid@rreid.mentorg.com (Richard Reid) Subject: The Yard's in Bloom, again. (an essay) Date: Thu, 20 May 1993 18:29:55 GMT Let's talk about weeds for a minute. I was wondering around in the Wilsonville library a couple of weeks ago and came upon a book titled something along the lines of "Love Your Weeds." The author's premise stated that weeds are not just weeds but that they too are plants. I'm not so sure. In my yard alone I have field mint, morning glory, clover, moss, thistle, chick weed and some type of surface runner that reminds me of the milfoil we'd get tangled up in as kids from swimming in the lake during the late summer. And of course, there is the grandaddy of them all, the ever present and common Dandelion. In my yard the dandelions are particu- larly bad. To prove it, a common joke in our house announces that it is time to cut the grass whenever the dandelions are in bloom. Of course by then, it is raining, and so the grass must wait until either the sun decides to overcome the gray north- west sky or until the clouds graciously hold back their rain like a mother holds her infant when he is hungry and there is no convenient place to nurse. And if this happens, and it rarely does, it is too late. The cessation of rain cause the dandelions to enter survival mode. You can tell when a dandelion is entering sur- vival mode by the miraculous conver- sion it undergoes from being a dainty yellow flower into a dainty puff of weed seeds.And as you can guess, when the grass gets clipped the weed seed is shaken from its' launching pad and para- chutes around in the air like a saboteur looking for an arms depot. In my yard the arms depot is the vegetable patch. I've tried a variety of things to rid myself of these subversive botanicals. I've dug, I've plucked, I've poured boiling water upon them like a medieval warrior defending the castle wall (A mans home is his castle). Once I even hypothesized that if I could prevent the yellow buttons from going to seed then in time I would eventually deplete the life cycle which in turn would start depopulation. I instructed my two year old. He ran around happily picking the pretty yellow flowers depositing them into a bucket. This lasted 30 minutes and a resulted in one bucket of deadheads and two days of green lawn. I've considered succumbing to chemical warfare. My extension agent claims that Weed-n-Feed, merely feeds the weeds. If it wasn't for the children, I'm sure I would throw off my Big-O organic man- tle and apply lawn chemicals in the same manner the U.S applied Agent Orange to the jungles of Vietnam: enthusiastically and without conscience. But my con- science tells me not to be so enthusiastic, not yet. I read once that dandelions, in their own Darwinian way, react to any condition that threatens their growth. For example, if you have a long lanky dandelion and cut it off about half way up the stem, then when a new flower forms it will only grow to the height from which the old flower was severed. if you do this repeat- edly you will eventually see the familiar butter colored bud at ground level. This fact causes me to surmise that as dandelions struggle their way up the evo- lutionary chain they will eventually be growing underground, remotely per- forming photosynthesis and propagating the species with its usual characteristics. This new strain of dandelion will then quietly and unashamedly spread itself throughout the regions of the earth build- ing it's population base to the point where it becomes a world super power and threatens the existence of mankind (why should we assume that dandelions be benevolent). All of this taking place underground and over a period of years that you as a home owner, having forgot- ten the painstaking hours you spent dig- ging, pulling, cutting and chemically removing these pest, will have no recourse but to give into their demands by releasing all potted plants, revealing your credit card numbers and granting first right of refusal for taking your daughter to the senior prom (Here, I brought you a corsage). I guess the choice is pure and simple: you can "Love your Weeds" (as future in-laws) or you can leave em! I think I'll leave em. Besides, it stopped raining, I have to go cut the grass, the yards in bloom, again. -- Rick Reid rreid@.mentorg.com -- Mentor Graphics Corporation