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#1
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Bindweed
Hi all,
I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me crazy!! Jo |
#2
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In article ,
Jo wrote: I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me crazy!! Yeah, well, I've being doing the same for 27 years :-( Bindweed is a New Zealand plant that has grown up the wrong way. You can make it sulk by using glyphosate, but that typically causes the top to produce only a few dwarfed leaves - a year or two later, it will regrow from its roots deep in the earth's core. The only thing more persistent is horsetail. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#3
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Nick Maclaren wrote:
:: In article , :: Jo wrote: ::: ::: I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the ::: dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence ::: and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them ::: up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff ::: just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to ::: be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it ::: doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours ::: were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the ::: garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. ::: If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. ::: This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me ::: crazy!! :: :: Yeah, well, I've being doing the same for 27 years :-( :: :: Bindweed is a New Zealand plant that has grown up the wrong way. :: You can make it sulk by using glyphosate, but that typically :: causes the top to produce only a few dwarfed leaves - a year :: or two later, it will regrow from its roots deep in the earth's :: core. :: :: The only thing more persistent is horsetail. :: And I'm inundated with both, even treating the flagged area with sodium chlorate every three months doesn't seem to stop horsetails. -- If God had intended us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs. |
#4
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"Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me crazy!! Jo Thanks guys...I feel a lot better now. It's encouraging to know that I'm not the only one constantly fighting the blasted weed!! Jo |
#5
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"Jo" wrote in message ... "Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me crazy!! Jo Thanks guys...I feel a lot better now. It's encouraging to know that I'm not the only one constantly fighting the blasted weed!! Our allotment is where they all meet for the final confrontation. Horsetails coming in from the left, bindweed from the bottom end, Ground elder from the right, and a generous helping of couch grass and clover. Steve (just grateful we haven't got JKW...... yet) http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/steveandmaggiesplot |
#6
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Steve wrote !! Our allotment is where they all meet for the final confrontation. Horsetails coming in from the left, bindweed from the bottom end, Ground elder from the right, and a generous helping of couch grass and clover. What, no Japanese Knot Weed? Would you like some to add to the fight? Seriously, we had a large clump of brambles next to one of our allotments and then along came Bindweed and in two seasons the brambles are almost gone, smothered by the bindweed. Trouble is where it touches the ground it roots and if I fail to see some creeping into the potato bed ...... A neighbour has a Bindweed problem and tours his garden looking out for any shoots and then pulls them out. His persistence is having and effect after one season, a plant cannot survive without leaves (well some can but that's how they grow) -- Regards Bob In Runnymede, 17 miles West of London |
#7
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Quote:
isolate the thing by giving bamboo cane support then wait until it has begun to produce flowers then give the herbicide...the idea is that its inner resourses will be at their lowest at the onset of flower production...late evening application is worth a try...effects of herbicide can be better . if its under the fence and that side aint gettin treated....hmm...dunno . |
#8
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"Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I have only had a small infestation, but I got rid of it by bundling the foliage up into a ball, treating with glyphosphate and putting it into a polythene bag ( with the root end still in the ground). I added a bit more liquid glyphosphate to the bag then sellotaped it up. The result was that the bindweed was in contact with the glyphosphate for a long time irrespective of how much it rained. I have not seen it since. Peter |
#9
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Jo writes
"Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of the garden. It seems to have no effect whatsoever. If anyone has any other bright ideas I would love to hear them. This is the third year I've put up with this and it's driving me crazy!! Jo Thanks guys...I feel a lot better now. It's encouraging to know that I'm not the only one constantly fighting the blasted weed!! You have my sympathy! I have a huge amount of it, plus ground elder - another thing the Romans did for us! I have found that if the soil is dry and crumbly, if you are patient and if there are not too many plants (yes, I know, a lot of ifs) then it is possible to gently explore where the damn stuff comes from. But be warned, the roots are extremely fragile and snap at the slightest opportunity. The only saving grace is it is distinctive, waxy white and curling, with purple tips as it breaks through the ground. If I pick any with newly broken ends, then I keep digging until I find the other end. In early march I followed one set down under the plum tree until I had made a rabbit burrow an arms length deep - but I think I got it all out. I let them dry out and then burn them. Its hopeless doing this if the soil is wet or damp, you just don't see the roots. Ground elder unfortunately has tiny thin roots which go straight down metres. I don't know how I will tackle this, except by topping and maybe roundup. -- David |
#10
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In article , Dave writes: | | I have found that if the soil is dry and crumbly, if you are patient and | if there are not too many plants (yes, I know, a lot of ifs) then it is | possible to gently explore where the damn stuff comes from. But be | warned, the roots are extremely fragile and snap at the slightest | opportunity. The only saving grace is it is distinctive, waxy white and | curling, with purple tips as it breaks through the ground. If I pick any | with newly broken ends, then I keep digging until I find the other end. | In early march I followed one set down under the plum tree until I had | made a rabbit burrow an arms length deep - but I think I got it all out. | I let them dry out and then burn them. | | Its hopeless doing this if the soil is wet or damp, you just don't see | the roots. | | Ground elder unfortunately has tiny thin roots which go straight down | metres. I don't know how I will tackle this, except by topping and maybe | roundup. Er, it's the other way round! Ground elder is very shallow rooted, bindweed goes down metres. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#11
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"peterlsutton" wrote in message news "Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I have only had a small infestation, but I got rid of it by bundling the foliage up into a ball, treating with glyphosphate and putting it into a polythene bag ( with the root end still in the ground). I added a bit more liquid glyphosphate to the bag then sellotaped it up. The result was that the bindweed was in contact with the glyphosphate for a long time irrespective of how much it rained. I have not seen it since. I think that some have advised here in the past that the glyphosphate should be a lot more dilute than normal - half strength or so. Thinking being that if it is too strong then it doesn't get chance to get right down it's very long roots before the plant dies off. -- Richard Sampson mail me at richard at olifant d-ot co do-t uk |
#12
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Dave wrote:
Jo writes "Jo" wrote in message ... Hi all, I can't get rid of it...it's going crazy in my garden....the dreaded bindweed. It's coming from next door, under the fence and is invading my lovely tidy beds. I have to keep digging them up and disturbing all the bark to get to the roots, but the stuff just seems to proliferate. I've tried glyphosate which seems to be the recommended stuff for killing the wretched weed, but it doesn't seem to work. I even snuck round when the neighbours were out and sprayed glyphosate on the weed on their side of Slightly over diluted works better than nominal strength. You want the plant to die slowly so that there is more damage to the extensive root system. If you hit it ocnsistently every week for a whole season there will not be much left at the end of it. I used to let it grow at the wild end of my garden. It never did much more than compete with the honeysuckle and other hedgerow plants. You have my sympathy! I have a huge amount of it, plus ground elder - another thing the Romans did for us! Ground elder is mildly annoying because it will regrow from the tiniest piece of the brittle white roots/rhizomes that it forms. I have found that if the soil is dry and crumbly, if you are patient and if there are not too many plants (yes, I know, a lot of ifs) then it is possible to gently explore where the damn stuff comes from. But be warned, the roots are extremely fragile and snap at the slightest opportunity. The only saving grace is it is distinctive, waxy white and curling, with purple tips as it breaks through the ground. If I pick any with newly broken ends, then I keep digging until I find the other end. In early march I followed one set down under the plum tree until I had made a rabbit burrow an arms length deep - but I think I got it all out. I let them dry out and then burn them. Its hopeless doing this if the soil is wet or damp, you just don't see the roots. Ground elder unfortunately has tiny thin roots which go straight down metres. I don't know how I will tackle this, except by topping and maybe roundup. ??? Are you sure? Round here ground elder has shallow fat brittle white roots 5-10 mm diameter. And will succumb to regular strimming though I prefer to hit it with glyphosate first and then dig out the dying plants. That way any bits you miss are less likely to regrow. I have an endless supply of ground elder in adjacent fields. All I can do is keep it at the boundary. Shallow roots so not too hard to do. Regards, Martin Brown |
#13
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I wrote this about bindweed, *but I could be wrong of course*:
the roots are extremely fragile and snap at the slightest | opportunity. The only saving grace is it is distinctive, waxy white and | curling, with purple tips as it breaks through the ground. If I pick any | with newly broken ends, then I keep digging until I find the other end. | In early march I followed one set down under the plum tree until I had | made a rabbit burrow an arms length deep - but I think I got it all out. | I let them dry out and then burn them. And AIUI this stuff is brighter green, has very long above ground shoots with purple stems, can climb itself 2-3m into trees and be very very quick to smother almost anything (one book says 25 sq m in a season, which would be spot on). It binds very tightly round anything and cannot be unwound, but needs several attempts to break the stems and pull them off. The roots are off-white, ivory, waxy, generally complex but without root hairs, and usually curled and relatively fat. Has long arrow-shaped leaves and white flowers. Page 282 of Collins Complete British Wildlife shows what I understand to be it, both Field Bindweed and Hedge varieties. | | Ground elder unfortunately has tiny thin roots which go straight down | metres. I don't know how I will tackle this, except by topping and maybe | roundup. AIUI this stuff is more bluey-green, with smaller leaves and smaller flowers, thinner stems which can generally be pulled out of whatever its climbing into, and which appear as generally shorter multiple shoots off one common ground-root, and the roots are browny and consistently thin and apart from having a few coils near the surface they then descend very deep indeed. Unfortunately the collins guide shows something completely unlike what I know as ground elder :-( It is possible I am calling this by the wrong name, and I have in fact two varieties of the same thing, this one possibly being called 'small bindweed' according to other books which are not very clear. Nick Maclaren writes Er, it's the other way round! Ground elder is very shallow rooted, bindweed goes down metres. Maybe I have my wires crossed? I may be able to send photos in a while - I have just seen shoots of both growing out :-((. It would be nice to find out. -- David |
#14
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In article ,
Dave wrote: I wrote this about bindweed, *but I could be wrong of course*: You aren't. Your mistake was different :-) | Ground elder unfortunately has tiny thin roots which go straight down ^^^^^^^^^^^^ | metres. I don't know how I will tackle this, except by topping and maybe | roundup. AIUI this stuff is more bluey-green, with smaller leaves and smaller flowers, thinner stems which can generally be pulled out of whatever its climbing into, and which appear as generally shorter multiple shoots off one common ground-root, and the roots are browny and consistently thin and apart from having a few coils near the surface they then descend very deep indeed. Unfortunately the collins guide shows something completely unlike what I know as ground elder :-( It is possible I am calling this by the wrong name, and I have in fact two varieties of the same thing, this one possibly being called 'small bindweed' according to other books which are not very clear. Nick Maclaren writes Er, it's the other way round! Ground elder is very shallow rooted, bindweed goes down metres. Maybe I have my wires crossed? I may be able to send photos in a while - I have just seen shoots of both growing out :-((. It would be nice to find out. Yes, hedge and field bindweeds, respectively. Note your error, which is what I was responding to :-) Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#15
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Nick Maclaren writes
In article , Dave wrote: I wrote this about bindweed, *but I could be wrong of course*: You aren't. Your mistake was different :-) Yes, hedge and field bindweeds, respectively. Note your error, which is what I was responding to :-) Oh lucky me then, two varieties of the stuff :-(( -- David |
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