Goathead

Also called Puncture vine, Bindii. Just like its name, the spiky seed pods can stick under your shoes, tires and even puncture your bike tires.

Life cycle

They are annuals and reseed quickly.

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Hazard

They can enter pet’s body when the seeds are dried out and hardened.

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Control

How to get rid of them?

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Prevention

How to prevent those suckers from coming out in spring?

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Life cycle

They are annuals and reseed quickly.

Learn more

Control

How to get rid of them?

Learn more

Hazard

They can enter pet’s body when the seeds are dried out and hardened.

Learn more

Prevention

How to prevent those suckers from coming out in spring?

Learn more

Life cycle

They are annual and love heat and dry climate. They can flower 3 weeks within germination and go seeded after 2 weeks. A single plant can produce 200–5,000 seeds and seeds are viable for 4-5 years.

They germinate when it’s warm (early summer) – usually after bur buttercup.

Goathead plants stay low on the ground and yellow flowers only open during daytime.

The bur (seed pod) is

Hazard

Sharp burrs cause serious injury to people, pets, livestocks and puncture bicycle and vehicle tires. They are easily spread by vehicles, pedestrians, and animals.

Can you have goats or livestock to get rid of goathead?

No. Goathead’s leaves contain saponins that can be toxic to livestock, especially sheep, if eaten in large quantities. All parts of the plant are toxic at all growth stages, but wilted plants are the most hazardous. 

 

Control

Easy to pull by hand before it goes seeded. If the seeds already go in the ground, consider a big scale of physical or chemical removal methods.

Solarization

It utilizes the penetrated sunlight to heat up the ground to 140°F with moisture to “cook” the weeds, seeds, pathogens, etc. Get a sheet of clear plastic tarp (>2 mil), moist the ground, cover it and secure the sides with dirt or rocks.

Cardboard method

1. We removed the topsoil with millions of dry mature bur buttercups. (We dumped it in big black garbage bags, moist it with water and let it “cook”. Use the soil after a few months.)

2. Cover the ground with cardboard. Cut some holes where we want to put plants in.

3. Mulch it with woodchips ~3″

Prevention

Catch them early in spring to prevent your garden get completely destroyed. 

Pre-emergent spray

Apply chemical spray before it sprouts (late winter/early spring)

Enrich your soil

Goathead thrives in hardpacked soil. Work on your soil and allow other plants/grass to thrive.

Plant native species

The most sustainable long-term way is having strong native perennials occupying the space to outcompete weeds.