Invasive plants

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the middle
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Invasive plants




by the middle » 17/06/10, 12:44

Hello,
Many plants are beautiful, but are not always adapted to our environment.
I'm talking about the plants that make rhizomes, develop slyly underground, and ultimately end up in the neighbor's bathroom, raise the tiling of the courtyard, destroy the road!
I'm talking mainly about bamboo, there are all kinds.
Some bamboos, once well developed, invade everything, and are of a foolproof resistance (I'm talking about chemicals)
If I were in government, I would ban the sale of this plant altogether, because the only good means of eradication is the buldozer! it's not a joke.
It's a time bomb.
To convince yourself, tap on google or other, "how to destroy my bamboos", or bamboo eradication ...
There are trials, ecologists ready to use any means to remove this plant from their lawn, or from their hedge!
Don't tell me about the bamboo barrier .... this plant is very intelligent (it has existed for millions of years, like the crocodile)
Bamboo is like nuclear power plants, it's a time bomb.
Never plant bamboos in the ground, even with a fence.
Why ban ?, pcq too many people underestimate the danger of this plant.
REMEMBER! :?
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by Christophe » 17/06/10, 12:50

Hi Alain,

I don't know if it's scientifically a bamboo (I don't think) but the knotweed is not bad in the genre: https://www.econologie.com/forums/plante-a-c ... t3582.html

Well if you spend a few minutes every year it is still "manageable" ... from there to arriving in the neighbor's bathroom ... : Shock:

I have always wondered how vegetation would evolve in the event of a serious human pandemic ... : Cheesy:
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by the middle » 17/06/10, 13:07

Hi Christopher,
I know your plant well, in general, it is found on railway lines ... it's also a big cat ... it's an invasive plant.
I know a person who sells his house because of his bamboo, who mess with the brothel at the neighbors ...
Some ferns are also invasive, the butterfly tree too ...
So does the toe, but its roots are much easier to extract.
All plants have their uses ...
but when the law, or the judges get involved, you have to be wary.
In summary, before planting, look at the consequent problems on the internet.
GLOBALIZATION of everything .... :? it's dangerous...
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by the middle » 17/06/10, 13:13

Recently a colleague confessed to me:
I was warned of the dangers of bamboo, and I didn't believe it ..
He said, now I think, but it's too late ...
We are all like my colleague in Europe, we say ... well, it's just a plant.
But it has nothing to do with normal European plants.
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by Christophe » 17/06/10, 13:33

Rundop Powaaaarrrrr!!! : Mrgreen:
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Re: Invasive plants




by hic » 17/06/10, 13:34

lejustemilieu wrote:Hello,
Many plants are beautiful, but are not always adapted to our environment.
I'm talking about the plants that make rhizomes, develop slyly underground, and ultimately end up in the neighbor's bathroom, raise the tiling of the courtyard, destroy the road!
If I were in government, I would ban the sale of this plant altogether, because the only good means of eradication is the buldozer! it's not a joke.


Hi fair

It's much easier to say

that when an invasive plant begins to invade, it will be difficult to stop it.

ecologically.
- not in his garden or in the city.

*** In any case, it is very expensive, both literally and figuratively. ***

Tap:
http://fr.wikipedia.org/ List of invasive species
Plants
Pets
Mushrooms and pathogens
GM

A timely topic
Last edited by hic the 17 / 06 / 10, 14: 05, 2 edited once.
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by the middle » 17/06/10, 13:36

Ga gue luv da!
When this plant entered the neighbor's beech hedge, it's good for the backhoe ... I would have to take a photo : Shock:
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by Korben Dallas » 17/06/10, 14:28

Ha bah me who thought it was nice this plant that grows quickly to climb a hedge quickly, it cools me!
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by dedeleco » 17/06/10, 15:33

Any plant in its biotope is invasive !!, because every plant and living being seeks to multiply.
Just change the biotope and it vegetates and dies !!
In the Sahara, an extreme case, almost no invasive plants !!

Bamboo in general prefers moisture and good soil, and thrives in wet years.
If we cut all the growing stems in spring and autumn, it is limited to a maximum of grass and if you mow, at the edge, it dies !!
I checked this on the bamboos coming from my neighbor who preferred my garden to his !!
But there is nothing to sue him, or to move.
In dry, limestone, bamboo does not invade much and I have not managed to acclimatize these bamboos in this other distant garden !!

Same for nettles, same biotope as brambles, or raspberries, but its roots are very superficial and therefore easy to tear off without touching the deep ones. But if there remains a piece of root, it starts again and therefore it takes a relentless effort to cut and pluck everything that grows !!
The same goes for Dimorphotéca which invades the entire Mediterranean garden with its beautiful flowers which are re-seeded but which the frost suppresses, to the point that some refuse to plant or sow them, because they are out of control !!
The same goes for lemon balm and mint.
It all depends on whether you like well-ordered or disorderly gardens where plants have freedom !!

it's good for the backhoe ..

Or in other words, we refuse the work of regularly removing and cutting each rod that grows over several years and we prefer the fast backhoe, like concrete.
Even better, a complete concrete garden, no more invasive plants, for a few years, because there are even plants that end up creeping into the cracks in the concrete !!
To see the number of pavilions with the concrete garden almost entirely, concrete is also an invasive species !!
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by Macro » 17/06/10, 15:43

I had a butterfly tree ... A simple breeze made it less invasive ... Never regrowed it ...
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