Summer weeding

It's so humbling to see weeds grow so fast and occupy their niche while tea plants are growing so slow. 
Ecological farming teaches us to look at weeds differently.

Weeding can be such a tedium if one keeps fighting weeds, but it can also be enlightening experience if he is humble enough to see the purposes each weed has.  Many low growing weeds start from seeds and they need disturbed soil.  Forest fire, animal activities, etc can create disturbed soil.  Many so-called noxious weeds grow particularly well on disturbed soil.  

Farming especially tillage and weeding is also disturbing soil so weeds are just a nature's response to lost balance.  Keep the cover on.... by keeping ground cover, weeds germination and establishment significantly decrease.  Simply favoring one type of weeds that do not interfere with farming activity can reduce other unwelcome weeds.  

For example, Honohono grass (also called Spreading dayflower, latin name: Commelina diffus) crawls fast and grows back from tiny bits of stems left on the ground.  Honohono grass is very suited for disturbed soil condition since it quickly spreads and covers open soil surface.   However, maintaining thick ground cover weakens honohono activity.
Summer weeding has just started. Idealism doesn't keep our farm weed resistant or no weeding condition, but it gives direction to which we should be aiming for minimal work while maximizing the benefit of cover crop.

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