violet weed in lawn
My lawn has been infested with a weed which looks very much like a miniature violet plant. When it flowers it has pretty violet coloured flowers and left to its own devices it spreads to the rest of the garden and pots. It appears impervious to lawn feed and weed and I wonder if anyone knows how to eradicate it? Thanks for any suggestions.
|
|
"Kay" wrote in message ... In article , clivedown clivedown.1 writes My lawn has been infested with a weed which looks very much like a miniature violet plant. When it flowers it has pretty violet coloured flowers and left to its own devices it spreads to the rest of the garden and pots. It appears impervious to lawn feed and weed and I wonder if anyone knows how to eradicate it? Thanks for any suggestions. Try Verdone, works well on weeds in grass, I don't have much faith in lawn weed and feed. Possibly veronica. Try a google image search to confirm. I know things can be invasive, but it always seems a shame to me to eradicate something that is pretty. -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
The message
from Kay contains these words: Possibly veronica. Try a google image search to confirm. I know things can be invasive, but it always seems a shame to me to eradicate something that is pretty. I knowhay you mean - the Veronica I was at school with was a stunner... -- Rusty Emus to: horrid dot squeak snailything zetnet point co full-stop uk http://www.users.zetnet.co.uk/hi-fi/ |
My lawn has been infested with a weed which looks very much like a miniature violet plant. When it flowers it has pretty violet coloured flowers and left to its own devices it spreads to the rest of the garden and pots. It appears impervious to lawn feed and weed and I wonder if anyone knows how to eradicate it? Thanks for any suggestions. Possibly veronica. Try a google image search to confirm. I know things can be invasive, but it always seems a shame to me to eradicate something that is pretty. -- Another possibility is heartsease - see link below to image. I had this in my last house, not in the lawn as I didn't have one, but it kept popping up all over the garden and in the gravel. Absolutely gorgeous littel plant. http://images.google.co.uk/imgres?im...icial%26sa%3DN |
Quote:
http://www.msuturfweeds.net/details/_/wild_violet_17/ I will certainly try verdone though. |
In article , clivedown writes: | | Another possibility is heartsease - see link below to image. I had this | in | my last house, not in the lawn as I didn't have one, but it kept | popping up | all over the garden and in the gravel. Absolutely gorgeous littel | plant. | | Thanks very much for the replies, but I'm afraid the plant is | definitely not one of those suggested. It's called Wild Violet and can | be seen he Er, heartsease IS a wild violet - which is a generic name, and not that of a particular species. There are half a dozen species of Viola commonly found wild in the UK and more exist. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
On Sun, 3 Jul 2005 17:16:33 +0000, clivedown
wrote: My lawn has been infested with a weed which looks very much like a miniature violet plant. When it flowers it has pretty violet coloured flowers and left to its own devices it spreads to the rest of the garden and pots. It appears impervious to lawn feed and weed and I wonder if anyone knows how to eradicate it? Thanks for any suggestions. I had the same thing happen in my front garden. It was not the real wild violet but some form of viola odorata, that seeded itself into my neighbour's lawn and also into the grass verge also. I have no lawn but my neighbour has now paved the whole of her front and back gardens! (not because of my violets!) They have disappeared from the verge also. I thought they were pretty, and if it had been my lawn I would not have tried to eradicate them. Pam in Bristol |
In article , Pam Moore writes: | | I had the same thing happen in my front garden. It was not the real | wild violet but some form of viola odorata, that seeded itself into my | neighbour's lawn and also into the grass verge also. I have no lawn | but my neighbour has now paved the whole of her front and back | gardens! (not because of my violets!) | They have disappeared from the verge also. | I thought they were pretty, and if it had been my lawn I would not | have tried to eradicate them. Are you sure that it wasn't the wild Viola odorata? It's not rare. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
"Pam Moore" wrote in message
... if it had been my lawn I would not have tried to eradicate them. Me neither |
|
Quote:
|
Jaques d'Alltrades wrote in
k: The message from (Nick Maclaren) contains these words: Er, heartsease IS a wild violet - which is a generic name, and not that of a particular species. There are half a dozen species of Viola commonly found wild in the UK and more exist. I know of fifteen, and that doesn't include hybrids or subspecies... I suspect anyone soulless enough to apply verdone to a colony of heartsease in flower is not going to be that interested in the botanical detail :-( Victoria |
In article , Victoria
Clare writes Jaques d'Alltrades wrote in . uk: The message from (Nick Maclaren) contains these words: Er, heartsease IS a wild violet - which is a generic name, and not that of a particular species. There are half a dozen species of Viola commonly found wild in the UK and more exist. I know of fifteen, and that doesn't include hybrids or subspecies... I suspect anyone soulless enough to apply verdone to a colony of heartsease in flower is not going to be that interested in the botanical detail :-( I don't know. Even I have pulled up violets by the armful. Depends on just how many you have, doesn't it? -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:57 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter