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jbosmith
Deeply Rooted
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- Oct 2, 2021
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Hmm well I want you to grow it and tell us for sure whether it takes over or not :-DThat's another synonym for it, there's a bunch, earth almonds, yellow nutsedge, atadwe. They are YUMMY! Especially soaked overnight, so chewy and sweet...
Yeah .. I have 4 gardens and there's big differences between them. Two of them are only a few hundred yards apart and can have seemingly completely different years pest-wise. I like that phrase!Same thing is true for certain pests. For some people certain pests are present but not really a problem. For others they are a disaster. There is a phrase for that, "All gardening is local"
We get two or three horsetail plants each spring in a narrow strip of soil between our house and driveway. We yank it out and don't see it again .. til the next spring.oh it can take over up here too. i have to keep a watch out for that and other species which like to colonize the gardens. once they get established it's a lot of work to get rid of them again. horsetail is constantly trying to invade, other weeds too. the best defense is well covered ground.
My brother used to live in southern Alabama and had a hay field near him. I was there in August and they were stacking round bales on the edge of the field. When I went back in November they were completely overtaken by bindweed. I have some weeds that drive me a little crazy but nothing like that. So crazy.
My personal nemesis is quack grass. It's not all that hard to pull or anything, but I have gardens that will look great from when I mulch them in May until we get juust the right rainy spell in July/August, and then it looks like a hayfield in what feels like mere moments. It's like it spends the whole first half of summer staging its assault...