I tried a battery powered strimmer - it didn't touch the stuff and went flat really fast - DON'T get a cheap one!!! If you can afford a petrol one, that would be the way to go - check with your allotment society if anyone has one you can borrow.
With the landscape fabric, you can use cardboard / old carpet / anything porous that doesn't let light through, but to be honest, the actual landscape fabric is the best. I had a 5 rod plot (half plot) and managed to get enough 15ft wide heavy duty landscape fabric to cover it for about �50. Unlike the "cheap" landscape fabric you can get from homebase / wickes etc, this one hasn't biodegraded, and I'm still using bits of it 4 years later - I've cut it up to grow courgettes and broccoli through to keep the weeds down.
With the landscape fabric, you can use cardboard / old carpet / anything porous that doesn't let light through, but to be honest, the actual landscape fabric is the best. I had a 5 rod plot (half plot) and managed to get enough 15ft wide heavy duty landscape fabric to cover it for about �50. Unlike the "cheap" landscape fabric you can get from homebase / wickes etc, this one hasn't biodegraded, and I'm still using bits of it 4 years later - I've cut it up to grow courgettes and broccoli through to keep the weeds down.
For the big stuff i hired a petrol brushcutter and bribed my dad and brother to operate it.. heavy vicious thing, but it cleared the entire plot of brambles in an afternoon so well worth a 1 off investment..

It's a right pain trying to cut it down/fold it up later on, & you won't want to chuck it out!
) and didn't rush home at the first shower! Can you have a shed?] Then I marked out where a couple of beds would be & covered as much as I could afford with weed suppressant. Over a month or so I double dug the first bed (bearing in mind it's Feb, and the ground too frozen to work some days) getting out as much root as possible, then planted it with garlic, onion sets & shallots. The second bed I really struggled with, it seemed to take forever, the horsetail roots were never-ending & planting time was getting closer! So I had a rethink, and copied something I saw on The Allotment DVD; I marked out 2 more beds with string, roughly turned the soil over & took out the biggest roots, covered the whole bed with cardboard, then manure, then weed suppressant. Cut holes in the black fabric & heigh presto! it's ready to plant in! I planted my potatoes, and my corn & squash in those 2 beds and they did great! Plus, when I came to dig them over this year most of the weeds came out quite easily, and there was tons of worms too. So I'd recommend that method
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