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#1
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Bloody couch grass!
A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan |
#2
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Bloody couch grass!
On 05/04/2010 17:33, alan.holmes wrote:
A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Glyphosate. -- David in Normandy. To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the subject line, or it will be automatically deleted by a filter and not reach my inbox. |
#3
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Bloody couch grass!
On Mon, 05 Apr 2010 17:53:30 +0200, David in Normandy wrote:
Glyphosate. Yep. Grasses of all sorts seem to be very susceptible to glyphosate. |
#4
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Bloody couch grass!
On 05/04/2010 18:37, Derek Turner wrote:
On Mon, 05 Apr 2010 17:53:30 +0200, David in Normandy wrote: Glyphosate. Yep. Grasses of all sorts seem to be very susceptible to glyphosate. Around this time of year when the weeds start to sprout on my veg plot I go around and spray the lot. There aren't many parts of the garden that still have veg in - leeks being the main exception at the moment so there is no fear of killing off the wrong plants due to spray drift etc. Saves a lot of hassle later on. The only other veg in there are peas, onion sets and potatoes. My peas are up now - I'd better get some fleece around them to keep the pigeons off. Onion sets have settled in - the birds have distributed a few here and there so I'll need to pop them back in again. Potatoes aren't up yet - they are still shivering underground. ;-) -- David in Normandy. To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the subject line, or it will be automatically deleted by a filter and not reach my inbox. |
#5
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Bloody couch grass!
"alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan |
#6
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Bloody couch grass!
In article ,
says... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan If in doubt treat the weeds then water off the plants that many have been caught, do it straight away and they will suffer to harm -- Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and Lapageria rosea |
#7
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Bloody couch grass!
On 05/04/2010 20:26, alan.holmes wrote:
wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Take care! My father killed a huge (40 year old) rhubarb plant by spraying glyphosate on surrounding weeds with impunity! -- David in Normandy. To e-mail you must include the password FROG on the subject line, or it will be automatically deleted by a filter and not reach my inbox. |
#8
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Bloody couch grass!
"alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. rob |
#9
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Bloody couch grass!
"George" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. It's a perfect nuisance (we call it "twitch" here) and I've like any idea to deal with it organically. Apart from picking out by hand all the rhizomes.. I really don't want to start using weedkiller after 25 years of being organic - it would ruin everything. It's dreadful stuff. Tina |
#10
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Bloody couch grass!
In message , Christina Websell
writes "George" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. It's a perfect nuisance (we call it "twitch" here) and I've like any idea to deal with it organically. Apart from picking out by hand all the rhizomes.. I really don't want to start using weedkiller after 25 years of being organic - it would ruin everything. It's dreadful stuff. Tina You could always try sowing Yellow Rattle. That gives it a fright! -- Gopher .... I know my place! |
#11
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Bloody couch grass!
"Gopher" wrote in message ... In message , Christina Websell writes "George" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. It's a perfect nuisance (we call it "twitch" here) and I've like any idea to deal with it organically. Apart from picking out by hand all the rhizomes.. I really don't want to start using weedkiller after 25 years of being organic - it would ruin everything. It's dreadful stuff. Tina You could always try sowing Yellow Rattle. That gives it a fright! -- Please explain. |
#12
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Bloody couch grass!
In message , Christina Websell
writes "Gopher" wrote in message ... In message , Christina Websell writes "George" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. It's a perfect nuisance (we call it "twitch" here) and I've like any idea to deal with it organically. Apart from picking out by hand all the rhizomes.. I really don't want to start using weedkiller after 25 years of being organic - it would ruin everything. It's dreadful stuff. Tina You could always try sowing Yellow Rattle. That gives it a fright! -- Please explain. Yellow Rattle (Rhinanthus spp.) is a parasitic plant for which the host is assorted grasses. If you could establish Yellow Rattle it would decrease the vigour of the grasses on which it was growing. -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#13
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Bloody couch grass!
In message , Stewart Robert Hinsley
writes In message , Christina Websell writes "Gopher" wrote in message ... In message , Christina Websell writes "George" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... "alan.holmes" wrote in message ... A large part of my veg area is covered in the stuff, how the hell can I get rid of it easily? Alan Thanks all, will have to make some effort to kill the damned stuff, the real trouble is it is all around stuff like rhubarb, which will be difficult to screen! Alan dab weedkiller on the grass with a fine paint brush. It may take a little time, depending on how much grass, but will be far more surgical than a spray application. It's a perfect nuisance (we call it "twitch" here) and I've like any idea to deal with it organically. Apart from picking out by hand all the rhizomes.. I really don't want to start using weedkiller after 25 years of being organic - it would ruin everything. It's dreadful stuff. Tina You could always try sowing Yellow Rattle. That gives it a fright! -- Please explain. Yellow Rattle (Rhinanthus spp.) is a parasitic plant for which the host is assorted grasses. If you could establish Yellow Rattle it would decrease the vigour of the grasses on which it was growing. It has worked miraculously in my small wildflower meadow thereby allowing space and nutrients for other, less invasive grasses as well as for the flowers. Furthermore, once established, it self seeds itself quite happily. See http://www.scotiaseeds.co.uk/Arch0610YRattle.htm. -- Gopher .... I know my place! |
#14
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Bloody couch grass!
Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
Yellow Rattle (Rhinanthus spp.) is a parasitic plant for which the host is assorted grasses. If you could establish Yellow Rattle it would decrease the vigour of the grasses on which it was growing. So ... once it's established, how does one go about removing the yellow rattle plants ... ? |
#15
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Get a couple of piglets.
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