On 02/07/2012 17:58, Sacha wrote:
On 2012-07-02 17:49:46 +0100, Stewart Robert Hinsley
said:
In message , Jake
writes
On Mon, 02 Jul 2012 14:39:27 +0100, Spider wrote:
This is, I believe, the identity of the weed which perniciously invades
part of my garden.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitetop
http://www.unce.unr.edu/programs/sites/tallwhitetop/
http://jennwarren.hubpages.com/hub/C...oxious-Weeds-I
n-Your-Lawn-and-Garden
Sorry for all the links, but this weed has been the bane of my life for
30 years. I *may* be just starting to see its grip loosening. I've
even risked planting that part of my garden again (except for one
corner). Previously, I've never dared move a wanted plant from that
area of the garden to another for fear of spreading it. I dream of the
day I never see another leafy spring rosette. Pedipalps crossed.
Oh dear. TBH, I've never heard of this weed being found in the UK
before. I must lead a very sheltered life.
There's a largish colony by a canal bank a couple of miles away from
me, but it's scarce of much of the country. It tends to be
southeastern and coastal.
Cheers, Jake
=======================================
Urgling from the East End of Swansea Bay. We don't yet have a
"dah dah dah dah dee dee deeee" theme tune but we're working on it.
There are a couple of recorded sites at the east end of Swansea Bay,
but there could be less than 50 sites in the whole of Wales.
It would appear that Spider has a rarity and should now go into high
reverse with eradicating it!! I've never seen it before and thought it
looked quite attractive...
Not such a rarity Sacha, see the map in this link
http://www.brc.ac.uk/plantatlas/inde...ecies-name-329
David @ the very wet end of Swansea bay, where it's been raining almost
all day.