Chickweed

Weed Control in Grass and Forage Crops

Author(s): 
Buckingham, S., McCalman, H. & Powell, H
Organisation: 
IBERS Grassland Development Centre as part of Farming Connect
Date: 
February 2013
Copyright: 
Creative Commons Licence
Evidence: 
Applied research

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Resource explained: 

This information on chickweed is taken from the Farming Connect factsheet 'Weed Control in Grass and Forage Crops' that is available on the OK-Net Arable Farm Knowledge platform and outlines ways to tackle some of the significant weeds in improved grassland and forage crops; chickweed, creeping thistle, spear thistle, docks, ragwort, buttercup, bracken and nettles. The factsheet includes suggestions for preventing establishment and spread of chickweed. In improved grassland, weeds can reduce yield and palatability, grazing area, forage quality and sward life, and affect animal performance.

Findings & recommendations: 
  • Chickweed can smother grass completely and can reduce ryegrass content by 50%.
  • Spread by seed, it can complete 6 life cycles during one year and produce 2,500 seeds per plant.
  • The high nitrogen content in chickweed presents a risk of livestock poisoning, and high moisture content affects silage, making it difficult to wilt and contributing to poorer fermentation.
  • To prevent establishment and spread, recommendations include:
    • Aim to establish dense, leafy swards through rotationally grazing new leys with sheep, and alternate cutting and grazing once sward density is improved.
    • Check acidity and nutrient levels in your soil - chickweed favours high potash levels.
    • Harrow in the autumn and sow grass/clover seed to fill gaps. (Topping is not effective as chickweed spreads below cutting height).
    • Move from field to field 30-50 ewes per hectare (15-20 ewes per acre) for 10 days when the ground is dry and where chickweed constitutes less than 5% ground cover.

Click here to access the whole Farming Connect factsheet.

(Photo credit: AJ Cann, CC BY-SA 2.0)