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[email protected] 31-08-2005 12:59 PM

Brambles
 
Hi I only have one Brambles bush and I want it to expand so I get
enough to make jelly dose anyone know how to do that.


Cire 31-08-2005 03:44 PM

My advice is, DON'T.

Just wait and watch, it will expand at an alarming rate once it is ready
and, unless you are able to contain it, you will wish you had never let it.

They are absolutely taking over my garden and I am quite powerless to stop
them. They are growing at an alarming rate all amongst thick shrubs, on
steep banks, where I can't possibly get at them. Once they start they will
put out long leaders which root and start the process all over again so
that, in a year, one bush can became twenty, ad infinitum!

I can't poison them without killing everything around them; I can't dig them
out because I cannot get into them without cutting other plants down. If
anyone has advice on how ho kill them in this situation, would they kindly
let me know.

Eric



J Jackson 31-08-2005 03:53 PM

wrote:
: Hi I only have one Brambles bush and I want it to expand so I get
: enough to make jelly dose anyone know how to do that.

Tip rooting....

Bury the tips of 1 or 2 of this years new stems in the ground. These will
root in a few weeks and start a new plant. In a month cut the new
plant free of the stem you buried and carefully dig up the
new plant, and transplant where you want more brambles.

You may well find that the bramble will do this all by itself and spread
very very quickly. To prevent rampant uncontrolled spread, then don't let
the ends of stems touch the ground and tie them up somewhere.



Martin Brown 31-08-2005 04:37 PM

Cire wrote:

My advice is, DON'T.

Just wait and watch, it will expand at an alarming rate once it is ready
and, unless you are able to contain it, you will wish you had never let it.


Brambles are OK. Thornless varieties with nice big brambles are handy.
The thorny ones make a pretty good robust anti-climbing decoration for a
rough fence. That, rosa rugosa and honeysuckle can fight it out.

They are absolutely taking over my garden and I am quite powerless to stop
them. They are growing at an alarming rate all amongst thick shrubs, on
steep banks, where I can't possibly get at them. Once they start they will
put out long leaders which root and start the process all over again so
that, in a year, one bush can became twenty, ad infinitum!

I can't poison them without killing everything around them; I can't dig them
out because I cannot get into them without cutting other plants down. If
anyone has advice on how ho kill them in this situation, would they kindly
let me know.


Keep cutting them back every time they regrow. Paint the leading new
growth stems with dilute glyphosate. Don't miss. Never let it root down.

Regards,
Martin Brown

Mike 31-08-2005 05:57 PM


"Cire" wrote in message
...
My advice is, DON'T.

or do what I did, build a couple of blocks of flats on the ground:-)) That
stopped the buggers ;-))

Mike



newsb 01-09-2005 10:30 AM

In article , Mike
writes

"Cire" wrote in message
...
My advice is, DON'T.

or do what I did, build a couple of blocks of flats on the ground:-)) That
stopped the buggers ;-))

Mike



thinks back
Didn't you know that there are ladies [1] present in this group? Such
dreadful, gutter language...

--
regards andyw
[1] little britainesque or otherwise

pammyT 02-09-2005 11:40 AM


"Cire" wrote in message
...
My advice is, DON'T.

Just wait and watch, it will expand at an alarming rate once it is ready
and, unless you are able to contain it, you will wish you had never let

it.

They are absolutely taking over my garden and I am quite powerless to stop
them. They are growing at an alarming rate all amongst thick shrubs, on
steep banks, where I can't possibly get at them. Once they start they will
put out long leaders which root and start the process all over again so
that, in a year, one bush can became twenty, ad infinitum!

I can't poison them without killing everything around them; I can't dig

them
out because I cannot get into them without cutting other plants down. If
anyone has advice on how ho kill them in this situation, would they kindly
let me know.

Use a brushcutter or tether a couple of goats near it. Mine use to scoff
brambles like they were manna from goat heaven.




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