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I beg to differ! My FIL's field beside us has been farmed for years with round-up ready soybeans & corn and there are more weeds IMHO. The farmer comes in and sprays round-up a few weeks before planting, but especially for soybeans that are planted late May-beginning of June, some weeds have already spread seeds by this time because in a mild winter they have been green most of the time. Then he plants and a few weeks later comes and sprays the weeds in the little plants. Corn is the big offender here, as he does nothing else until harvest because the weeds only matter to small seedlings. By fall the field is a bloom with everything INCLUDING that darn, impossible to irradicate thistle. I have lived here 25 years and have NOT seen a decrease in weeds in that field. If my Dh did not brush hog around the edges of this field, we would have even more weeds! There are always some weeds in the middle of the field also that grow and bloom until November. We have had parts of the field that we grow stuff in killed by Round-up overspray when the guy is careless. Sorry, I would not take Monsanto's word on anything, but this is just my experience.
I was describing what can be done with two straight years of Round-Up soybeans being planted. After the second year of beans are harvested, wait until the middle of winter and plant your native grasses and forbs (native flowers). Since you live in Ohio, scatter your seeds over the snow in December. The freezing and thawing of the ground will bury them for you.
This has worked for thousands of other people; can't imagine why it wouldn't work for you.