- Frequent lawn mowing
- Pull out and dig up violets
- Master the violets with the help of chemistry
- More tips for fighting
- tips and tricks
Violets - in the bed, along the way and under trees. But in the lawn? A few violets are beautiful, but many meticulous gardeners are disturbed by them. Unthinkable when they become a whole sea. How do you get rid of them?

Frequent lawn mowing
In order to get rid of the edible violets without chemical means, it is advisable to mow the lawn regularly. It is best to shorten it every 5 days to a height of between 4 and 8 cm.
By scarifying the violets are constantly shortened and robbed of their strength. At the same time, the lawn should be supplied with lawn fertilizer and plenty of water. This strengthens it so that it can displace competitors such as violets.
Pull out and dig up violets
In addition to regular lawn cutting, you can fight the violets directly. On the one hand, you can pull out Viola, and on the other, you can dig it up.
- pull young specimens out of the ground
- Soil should be moist
- Grab the main shoots on the ground and pull them out upwards
- better dig up older specimens (easily break when pulled out)
- use a spade or digging fork to dig
- dig up all the roots
Master the violets with the help of chemistry
If all biological control agents don't help, chemicals can be the remedy of choice. Forest violets, horned violets, sweet violets, etc. - they can all be destroyed with herbicides against lawn weeds. The active ingredients dicamba and quinclorac, for example, have proven themselves. These active ingredients are specifically targeted at broadleaf weeds. They do not damage the grass. Use such means according to the manufacturer's instructions!
More tips for fighting
Destroy the violets before they bloom! Otherwise, they produce seeds and self-sowing is close. It is also important that you carry out the fight several times. As a rule, violets cannot be driven away by a one-off procedure.
tips and tricks
Grass goes well with violets. While the grass prefers to grow in the sun, violets prefer to be in the shade.