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#1
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weeds?
We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan |
#2
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weeds?
"Chris Hogg" wrote in message ... On Wed, 4 Jul 2012 11:24:51 +0100, "Alan Holmes" wrote: We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan See http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/...e.aspx?pid=348 My mother has it in her lawn, and flowerbeds, and paths, and....and....and...etc. In fact there's more MYOB in the lawn than grass, and actually it doesn't look too bad. She's tried eradicating it with selective weedkiller but without success. The RHS link recommends glyphosate, but this isn't really suitable for lawns unless you intend re-laying the whole thing as it will kill the grass as well, if you still have any! I have tried glyphosate, at least that is what I think it is, the one I use is called ROUNDUP, but it doesn't seem to be very good unless I am doing something wrong! Alan |
#3
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weeds?
"Alan Holmes" wrote in
: We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan I would squash them with your boot and then treat them with glyphosate. Wait 2 or 3 weeks and cover them with carpet. Wait a month or so and repeat if any are still showing. Examine the area well, because this little sod is hard to see when it is starting up. A tiny green spot needs the treatment described above. Look behind any features, such as downpipes, waterbutts or anything else it can hide behind. It seems like we spend more time getting rid of weeds than actually growing our preferred garden items, but a lot of the time an hours hoeing is not enough, is it. Good luck, Alan. Baz |
#4
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weeds?
On 04/07/2012 11:24, Alan Holmes wrote:
We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan There is also a variegated form. It makes a very good liner for Hanging baskets, esp it you can get it up in sheets, and not all little bits. David @ the wet end of Swansea bay where it's still raining. |
#5
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weeds?
On 04/07/2012 12:49, Baz wrote:
"Alan Holmes" wrote in : We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan I would squash them with your boot and then treat them with glyphosate. That is reckoned to be the right way. Assuming that his "mind-your-own-business" is the same thing as for example: http://www.gardenersworld.com/how-to...iness/475.html I hate "common names" they vary too much and are very ambiguous. Wait 2 or 3 weeks and cover them with carpet. Wait a month or so and repeat if any are still showing. Examine the area well, because this little sod is hard to see when it is starting up. A tiny green spot needs the treatment described above. Look behind any features, such as downpipes, waterbutts or anything else it can hide behind. It seems like we spend more time getting rid of weeds than actually growing our preferred garden items, but a lot of the time an hours hoeing is not enough, is it. Main problem this year is the garden too wet to stand on! (and often too cold and windy as well) -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#6
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weeds?
On Wed, 4 Jul 2012 12:47:43 +0100, "Alan Holmes"
wrote: "Chris Hogg" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 4 Jul 2012 11:24:51 +0100, "Alan Holmes" wrote: We are inundated with a mess whose common name is 'mind your own business' and I want to find a weedkiller which will kill the damned stuff, I have tried several already but it still comes back with a vengeance! So, what do I have to do to get ride of the damned things? They seem to just be growing at the front and side of the house out of the sun. Alan See http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/...e.aspx?pid=348 My mother has it in her lawn, and flowerbeds, and paths, and....and....and...etc. In fact there's more MYOB in the lawn than grass, and actually it doesn't look too bad. She's tried eradicating it with selective weedkiller but without success. The RHS link recommends glyphosate, but this isn't really suitable for lawns unless you intend re-laying the whole thing as it will kill the grass as well, if you still have any! I have tried glyphosate, at least that is what I think it is, the one I use is called ROUNDUP, but it doesn't seem to be very good unless I am doing something wrong! Alan 'mind your own business' is resistant to all chemicals that can be used on lawns. I quite like it in any other location. My method of stopping it growing in the lawn was to get rid of the lawn! Steve -- Neural Network Software. http://www.npsl1.com EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. http://www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. http://www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. http://www.justnn.com |
#7
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weeds?
Martin Brown wrote in
news Main problem this year is the garden too wet to stand on! (and often too cold and windy as well) Yes, that is a problem. Stanley knife to make an opening for glyphosate? Shroud the nozzle of the sprayer? Don't know. I am not at all good with the latin names, so when I say potato or broad bean, Am I being ambiguous? But point taken! Soleirolia soleirolii is exact. For example my solanum tuberosum are growing nicely. Or my Vicia faba have Simulium. I prefer being ambiguous. It's easier. Just having a laugh, cachinnus or cachinnatio, but that IS ambiguous? Baz |
#8
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weeds?
On 04/07/2012 15:24, Baz wrote:
Martin Brown wrote in news Main problem this year is the garden too wet to stand on! (and often too cold and windy as well) Yes, that is a problem. Stanley knife to make an opening for glyphosate? Shroud the nozzle of the sprayer? Don't know. I am not at all good with the latin names, so when I say potato or broad bean, Am I being ambiguous? But point taken! Soleirolia soleirolii is exact. For example my solanum tuberosum are growing nicely. Or my Vicia faba have Simulium. I prefer being ambiguous. It's easier. Just having a laugh, cachinnus or cachinnatio, but that IS ambiguous? Baz I take it you don't know the plant Baz, opening the stem would be a problem. see http://www.bbc.co.uk/gardening/plant...ages/868.shtml |
#9
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weeds?
David Hill wrote in
: On 04/07/2012 15:24, Baz wrote: Martin Brown wrote in news Main problem this year is the garden too wet to stand on! (and often too cold and windy as well) Yes, that is a problem. Stanley knife to make an opening for glyphosate? Shroud the nozzle of the sprayer? Don't know. I am not at all good with the latin names, so when I say potato or broad bean, Am I being ambiguous? But point taken! Soleirolia soleirolii is exact. For example my solanum tuberosum are growing nicely. Or my Vicia faba have Simulium. I prefer being ambiguous. It's easier. Just having a laugh, cachinnus or cachinnatio, but that IS ambiguous? Baz I take it you don't know the plant Baz, opening the stem would be a problem. see http://www.bbc.co.uk/gardening/plant...pages/868.shtm It is common around this area, David. I just scrape with my boot and spray with glyphosate. I would have thought slashing the mass with a Stanley knife would do the trick, I will try it when I next see some. Baz |
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