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HELP-Blackberries need containing
HELP-Blackberries need containing
My blackberries have left the garden, crossed the yard and I think are about to come in the back door - What can I do? 4 years ago I planted 2 small blackberry shoots along the rear fence of my yard. While I love the blackberries I get, I now have 50+ plants and they are migrating forward into my yard. Last year I dug and removed the plants that had come too far forward from the fence. My goal is to do something permanent to keep the grass out of the blackberry area and the blackberries out of the grass. My idea is to dig a narrow trench (30 to 40 feet long) parallel to and a few feet away from the fence (basically an arms length away) and bury something like alumninum that is sold in rolls of various widths to prevent the roots from migrating across that border, then maybe later putting down rock inside the border. My questions: 1) How deep does material need to go? I am guessing 6 to 8 inches or will the roots eventually go deeper and come under? I would like this solution to last 20 years or more. 2) If I put some rock down where the blackberries are will I kill them off accidentally? I want to keep the blackberries, just contain them and have an area that still looks reasonably attractive in the winter when the canes have been pruned back to the ground. I am guessing a thin layer of small landscape rock might be okay or should I go with a mulch? 3) If the alumnium is a bad idea, why, and what would you suggest instead? Thanks in advance for any and all help or humor. |
#2
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HELP-Blackberries need containing
In article .com,
"gardens.rec" wrote: HELP-Blackberries need containing My blackberries have left the garden, crossed the yard and I think are about to come in the back door - What can I do? snipped Thanks in advance for any and all help or humor. Dig them up as they grow, and sell them on ebay. ;-) They are worth about $3.00 per rooted cane. Your invading hoard will make you rich! I can't keep them alive. Send me some! :-) -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
#3
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HELP-Blackberries need containing
On 12 May 2007 16:44:24 -0700, "gardens.rec"
wrote: HELP-Blackberries need containing My blackberries have left the garden, crossed the yard and I think are about to come in the back door - What can I do? 4 years ago I planted 2 small blackberry shoots along the rear fence of my yard. While I love the blackberries I get, I now have 50+ plants and they are migrating forward into my yard. Last year I dug and removed the plants that had come too far forward from the fence. My goal is to do something permanent to keep the grass out of the blackberry area and the blackberries out of the grass. My idea is to dig a narrow trench (30 to 40 feet long) parallel to and a few feet away from the fence (basically an arms length away) and bury something like alumninum that is sold in rolls of various widths to prevent the roots from migrating across that border, then maybe later putting down rock inside the border. My questions: 1) How deep does material need to go? I am guessing 6 to 8 inches or will the roots eventually go deeper and come under? I would like this solution to last 20 years or more. 2) If I put some rock down where the blackberries are will I kill them off accidentally? I want to keep the blackberries, just contain them and have an area that still looks reasonably attractive in the winter when the canes have been pruned back to the ground. I am guessing a thin layer of small landscape rock might be okay or should I go with a mulch? 3) If the alumnium is a bad idea, why, and what would you suggest instead? Thanks in advance for any and all help or humor. Remember that they not only send out runners, the birds eat them and then drop the seeds all over the place. -- Susan N. "Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral, 48 percent indignation, and 50 percent envy." Vittorio De Sica, Italian movie director (1901-1974) |
#4
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HELP-Blackberries need containing
On May 12, 7:44 pm, "gardens.rec" wrote:
HELP-Blackberries need containing My blackberries have left the garden, crossed the yard and I think are about to come in the back door - What can I do? 4 years ago I planted 2 small blackberry shoots along the rear fence of my yard. While I love the blackberries I get, I now have 50+ plants and they are migrating forward into my yard. Last year I dug and removed the plants that had come too far forward from the fence. My goal is to do something permanent to keep the grass out of the blackberry area and the blackberries out of the grass. My idea is to dig a narrow trench (30 to 40 feet long) parallel to and a few feet away from the fence (basically an arms length away) and bury something like alumninum that is sold in rolls of various widths to prevent the roots from migrating across that border, then maybe later putting down rock inside the border. My questions: 1) How deep does material need to go? I am guessing 6 to 8 inches or will the roots eventually go deeper and come under? I would like this solution to last 20 years or more. 2) If I put some rock down where the blackberries are will I kill them off accidentally? I want to keep the blackberries, just contain them and have an area that still looks reasonably attractive in the winter when the canes have been pruned back to the ground. I am guessing a thin layer of small landscape rock might be okay or should I go with a mulch? 3) If the alumnium is a bad idea, why, and what would you suggest instead? Thanks in advance for any and all help or humor. You obviously don't mow very often. Mowing the grass regularly will prevent the blackberries from taking over. Fat chance accidently killing them with rocks. Before the blackberry buds swell in the spring you can use roundup on the grass in the berry patch. |
#5
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HELP-Blackberries need containing
In article .com,
James wrote: On May 12, 7:44 pm, "gardens.rec" wrote: HELP-Blackberries need containing My blackberries have left the garden, crossed the yard and I think are about to come in the back door - What can I do? 4 years ago I planted 2 small blackberry shoots along the rear fence of my yard. While I love the blackberries I get, I now have 50+ plants and they are migrating forward into my yard. Last year I dug and removed the plants that had come too far forward from the fence. My goal is to do something permanent to keep the grass out of the blackberry area and the blackberries out of the grass. My idea is to dig a narrow trench (30 to 40 feet long) parallel to and a few feet away from the fence (basically an arms length away) and bury something like alumninum that is sold in rolls of various widths to prevent the roots from migrating across that border, then maybe later putting down rock inside the border. My questions: 1) How deep does material need to go? I am guessing 6 to 8 inches or will the roots eventually go deeper and come under? I would like this solution to last 20 years or more. 2) If I put some rock down where the blackberries are will I kill them off accidentally? I want to keep the blackberries, just contain them and have an area that still looks reasonably attractive in the winter when the canes have been pruned back to the ground. I am guessing a thin layer of small landscape rock might be okay or should I go with a mulch? 3) If the alumnium is a bad idea, why, and what would you suggest instead? Thanks in advance for any and all help or humor. You obviously don't mow very often. Mowing the grass regularly will prevent the blackberries from taking over. Fat chance accidently killing them with rocks. Before the blackberry buds swell in the spring you can use roundup on the grass in the berry patch. Timing is everything... :-) -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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