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Eigenvector 13-08-2007 01:09 AM

Rhetorical of the day, Strawberries/Wisteria
 
What's worse to have **next** to your garden - strawberries or Wisteria? I
have both next to my herbal garden and its a constant battle to keep the
clutching vines of both plants out of the ground. The Wisteria isn't even
mine, its my neighbors, they use it to fill in the holes in the chain link
fence that separates us - makes an incredible green wall in the summer.
Only problem is that it overruns EVERYTHING in its path. As for the
strawberries, my mistake of planting them by my herbs. The frickin' things
spread out worse than bermuda grass - only benefit that I can see if that
they only produce once a year and stay nice and bushy and green the rest of
the summer. Strawberries grow wonderfully in Seattle - almost TOO
wonderfully.



Billy Rose 13-08-2007 01:21 AM

Rhetorical of the day, Strawberries/Wisteria
 
In article ,
"Eigenvector" wrote:

What's worse to have **next** to your garden - strawberries or Wisteria? I
have both next to my herbal garden and its a constant battle to keep the
clutching vines of both plants out of the ground. The Wisteria isn't even
mine, its my neighbors, they use it to fill in the holes in the chain link
fence that separates us - makes an incredible green wall in the summer.
Only problem is that it overruns EVERYTHING in its path. As for the
strawberries, my mistake of planting them by my herbs. The frickin' things
spread out worse than bermuda grass - only benefit that I can see if that
they only produce once a year and stay nice and bushy and green the rest of
the summer. Strawberries grow wonderfully in Seattle - almost TOO
wonderfully.


I'm a newbie with strawberries. I thought they were only good for about
4 years.
--
FB - FFF

Billy
http://angryarab.blogspot.com/

Rachael Simpson 13-08-2007 02:01 AM

Rhetorical of the day, Strawberries/Wisteria
 
Eigenvector wrote:
What's worse to have **next** to your garden - strawberries or Wisteria? I
have both next to my herbal garden and its a constant battle to keep the
clutching vines of both plants out of the ground. The Wisteria isn't even
mine, its my neighbors, they use it to fill in the holes in the chain link
fence that separates us - makes an incredible green wall in the summer.
Only problem is that it overruns EVERYTHING in its path. As for the
strawberries, my mistake of planting them by my herbs. The frickin' things
spread out worse than bermuda grass - only benefit that I can see if that
they only produce once a year and stay nice and bushy and green the rest of
the summer. Strawberries grow wonderfully in Seattle - almost TOO
wonderfully.



Sorry, no sympathy here....I love both in any place! lol

Sheldon[_1_] 13-08-2007 02:15 AM

Rhetorical of the day, Strawberries/Wisteria
 
On Aug 12, 8:21?pm, Billy Rose wrote:
In article ,

"Eigenvector" wrote:
What's worse to have **next** to your garden - strawberries or Wisteria? I
have both next to my herbal garden and its a constant battle to keep the
clutching vines of both plants out of the ground. The Wisteria isn't even
mine, its my neighbors, they use it to fill in the holes in the chain link
fence that separates us - makes an incredible green wall in the summer.
Only problem is that it overruns EVERYTHING in its path. As for the
strawberries, my mistake of planting them by my herbs. The frickin' things
spread out worse than bermuda grass - only benefit that I can see if that
they only produce once a year and stay nice and bushy and green the rest of
the summer. Strawberries grow wonderfully in Seattle - almost TOO
wonderfully.


I'm a newbie with strawberries. I thought they were only good for about
4 years.


The parent, yes, but each sucession of offspring add another 4 years.

Strawberry plants are pretty easy to keep in check, so is wisteria...
in fact the more severly wisteria is pruned the more profuse it's
flowering. Unfortunately chain link fence is probably the very worst
support one could have chosen for wisteria.



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