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can you identify?

Started by tartonterro, November 07, 2007, 18:50:05

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tartonterro

trying to identify the following plant/weed that is all over my allotment, and keeps coming back
any ideas and suggestions on how to get rid of would be greatly appreciated

tartonterro


manicscousers

could be creeping buttercup, keep digging it up if it is, spreads like a strawberry runner, bit of a b*gger  :)

tartonterro

you got it in one, just googled it and thats the stuff i have,
now all i need to find out is how to get rid of it

manicscousers

luckily, if you keep digging up the runners, they can be a bit tough, they will disappear but you do have to keep at it, better than bindweed  ;D

tartonterro

gona try a combination of digging up and using my weed wand, try weaken what i cant get dug out straight away - hopefuly frost etc might finish it off for me

froglets

Hi,

frost will slow it down but not kill it off.  It's a british native so quite used to surviving our winters.  It's chemical or manual options for this one.
is it in the sale?
(South Cheshire)

Tee Gee

Its a meadow land plant and I believe it comes on to the plot via farm yard manure i.e. undigested buttercup seed.

I have given up using weedkiller on it as I find it a waste of time (and too expensive) because the next year when I dig in my manure, I find it just defeats the objective.

During winter digging I bag it up and take it to the dump, I don't compost it.

I find hoeing is the best way to keep it in check, particularly at the start of the season as it is emerging.

artichoke

It's a cunning weed - if you grab the leaves and pull, they break away from the growing point and the roots, and leave everything in the ground needed to grow again. I use a sharp knife to slice through the roots underneath the growing point as I pull at the leaves. You can leave the white roots in the ground to rot. I compost the plants in tied plastic bags for a year. It is very satisfying tipping out a bag of stone dead buttercup, couch, nettles, bindweed etc, and enriching the ground with it.

Robert_Brenchley

You have to get everything out down to the growing points; don't worry too much about the roots. Be persistent; it's not deep rooted, but it will come back from the least little bit. It seeds as well. I had it everywhere at one point, but there's very little now.

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