Corn Gluten Meal Prevents Weeds - IF you use it CORRECTLY
I was ready to use corn gluten meal on my stone front yard in the
spring, but its already teeming with small plants; they look like green
confetti on my stones. Can I use corn gluten anyway, or must I suffer
through another year of spraying vinegar on the weeds?
---Jeanne in
Merchantville, NJ.
I heard about the wonders of corn gluten meal and ordered some. Then we
decided to turn our lawn into a garden. But we have a big problem with
crab grass in that garden. Can we use the gluten there? Or is it only
for lawns?
---Peter in
Oklahoma City
Does corn gluten meal alter the pH of soil? A local county agent
told me it would, “and then I would really have problems”! I didn't
really believe him; these agents don't even want to talk about
"organics". I was able to get a local feed store to order me some at a
very low cost—less then $20 for 50 lbs.
---Hilda in
Daleville, AL
Is corn gluten meal okay to use on our zoysia grass lawn?
---Bob in
Alexandria, VA
I've been applying gluten in the Spring and Fall. We used a name brand
product the first year, but since then we’ve been using stuff we got at
the local feed store (it costs a lot less!) But the gluten doesn’t seem
to be working now; we have so many weeds!
---Elinor in
Gwynedd Valley, PA
Mike: Our Master Gardener program was hoping to use corn gluten
to stop weed seeds, but it looks like the quantities we’d need would be
very expensive. A cheaper type is sold by local farm stores in the form
of pellets; one place ground some up for us, but it didn't seem to have
much effect on pre-emerging weeds. Is there a difference between these
pellets and the products at garden supply stores?
---Valerie in
Arkansas.
There are an awful lot of misconceptions about how corn gluten meal
works. As turfgrass expert Dr. Nick Christians discovered at Iowa State
University, corn gluten meal—a by-product of cornstarch manufacture—has
the ability to prevent successful germination of weed seeds—and pretty
much all other seeds too.
I generally just say “all seeds” so that people realize they shouldn’t
sow grass or veggie or flower seeds when they use corn gluten meal, but
Dr. Christians, being a researcher, would like to note here that a few
seeds (barnyard grass and velvetleaf specifically) don’t seem to have
been affected in lab studies until large amounts of corn gluten were
used, and even then it didn’t reduce their germination rate as much as
the other weeds tested. Here’s a direct link to that study for you
science nuts out there: http://www.gluten.iastate.edu/pdf/grnhsechr.pdf
In a lawn and garden situation, however, keep thinking “all seeds” to
be safe. And, as we’ll explain in a minute, even weeds whose seeds
aren’t strongly affected can be knocked out of a lawn over time with
continued use.
Back to the basics for now: Corn gluten meal is also naturally high in nitrogen—the
food lawns crave the most. This makes it a perfect substitute for the
toxic chemical “weed and feed” so many homeowners use to the detriment
of their health—and the health of their family, pets, water, and the
planet in general. Apply the minimum of 10 pounds per 1,000 sq. feet of
lawn and you’re providing a pound of nitrogen; move up to the
weed-killing max of 20 pounds per 1,000 sq feet and you’re giving your
lawn two pounds of ‘N’—an absolutely fabulous natural feeding.
To get the most weed and feed effect, apply a corn gluten meal product
that’s labeled as a pre-emergent herbicide (really important; we’ll
explain why in a second) to your lawn in the Spring when forsythia
bushes begin to bloom (or when your county extension agent says
crabgrass germinates in your area) and it will feed the turf while
preventing dormant weed seeds—like crabgrass—from germinating. For best
results, choose a time when rain isn’t predicted over the next few
days, water it in well and allow it to dry out; seeds will try to
sprout, then die. Don’t apply it if its going to rain non-stop for two
weeks; you need a dry stretch after watering. Obviously, you can’t sow
a new lawn at the same time; wait six weeks for the gluten to lose its
herbicidal effect. (Northerners trying to start or reseed a cool-season
lawn (like Kentucky bluegrass) shouldn’t sow in the Spring anyway.)
Spread even the finest quality corn gluten on established weeds like
those walkway ones, however, and you’ll simply be feeding them. Mulch,
vinegar, flame, hoeing and/or hand pulling are the answer here—and in
that large-scale, Master Gardener situation. Yes, you could prevent
future weeds by dusting with corn gluten every six weeks, but it would
be hugely expensive and you’d be wasting all that great nitrogen
fertilizer if there weren’t ‘wanted’ plants growing in that area. (See
below.)
But established perennial (“broadleaf”) weeds in lawns are a more
interesting story; regular applications of corn gluten meal do control
them. The gluten prevents dropped seeds from sprouting new plants, and
it feeds the lawn so well and naturally that if you cut your grass
correctly (see previous lawn care Questions of the Week; links below),
perennial weeds like dandelions will be crowded out by the roots of
your now-happy grass.
Corn gluten does not change soil pH or harm any type of grass or
existing plant (other than eventually crowding out established weeds in
lawns). It won’t hurt your zoysia grass, tomatoes, Spring
bulbs, etc. etc.
So yes, go right ahead and use it in the Spring to prevent dormant weed
seeds from sprouting in flower and vegetable beds—especially after
tilling and other forms of soil-turning that uncover a lot of buried
weed seeds. This type of use has proven to be a wonderful method of
weed control in strawberry beds, to name just one well-researched
example. Just remember that no seeds will sprout there for six weeks,
so use another form of weed-control in spots where’ll you’ll be
planting by seed, and save the CGM for where plants are going in.
Labeling: “Corn gluten meal” sold as animal feed is not the same thing.
It is not licensed by Iowa State, so the university is not compensated
when you buy it; and it often does not contain the right protein
concentration to achieve seed death. I have received many emails from
listeners who thought they were getting a huge break on the price, only
to discover they were simply feeding their emerging crabgrass.
Products licensed by Iowa State will say something like “pre-emergent
herbicide” on the label, have the correct protein concentration,
and carry complete instructions for proper use. They are more expensive
than animal feed CGM because they use a much higher quality
gluten—which sells at a premium—and the manufacturer pays that fee to
the university to fund research to find more cool stuff like this. By
law, animal feed gluten cannot say anything about herbicidal effects
and will not have directions for any weed-killing use. It also might
not work—did I mention that?
OK—here’s those links to earlier Questions of the Week:
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