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19051


Date: March 17, 2024 at 15:59:10
From: chatillon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Dealing with Invasives

URL: https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/family-faces-tough-decision-after-clearing-menace-ridden-land-my-next-problem-is-what-to-do-with-them/ar-BB1k3sPd?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=7c5b9523573f46c48e95b899247fbb84&ei=13


(I'll add a third: the infernal Chinese Tallow.)

If you find invasive plants or trees on your property,
you need to get rid of them as soon as possible.

Before you know it, they will be springing up all over
the place, limiting the nutrients, sunlight, and water
your other plants can receive as well as crowding out
their space.

What's more, if the seeds reach neighboring gardens and
start sprouting next door, it won't be long before you
become community enemy No. 1.

That's why one Redditor was so pleased with the work
they had done to rid their parents' land of Bradford
pears and trees of heaven that they posted a picture of
the resulting pile of wood they had ripped from the
earth.

"My crusade on Bradford Pears and tree of heavens,"
they captioned the post, detailing they had "5 piles of
around 120 trees with about 30 left."

Though the piles were undoubtedly satisfying to see
after the hard labor, they then had a bit of a
conundrum.

"My next problem is what to do with them," they said on
the r/arborists sub-Reddit. "Do I burn them all next
spring or should I turn the larger ones into firewood?"

One user suggested the latter was a worthwhile
solution. "I heat my place with a woodstove," they
began. "I salvage a lot of Bradford pear trunks from a
municipal yard waste branch dump. They burn
surprisingly well."

Another Redditor agreed, adding, "Utilizing invasive
tree species for fuel is sort of like people consuming
lion fish as a delicacy."

The original poster detailed that to prevent the
troublesome trees from returning, they treated the
trees of heaven and sprayed brush killer on the stumps.

But while that seemed like a wise move, one Redditor
warned our weed-whacking OP to be wary of a comeback.

"I think you should expect resprouts," they said. "No
matter how dead one of those look more come up in my
experience."

Bradford pears might be desirable because of their
white blooms, but they can emit an unpleasant smell and
spread incredibly easily. In fact, the advice from the
Choose Natives website is simply "Do not plant."

Meanwhile, trees of heaven are described by the
Ecological Landscape Alliance as being "a fast growing,
deciduous, exotic invasive tree that is able to
germinate and grow in a wide variety of soil and site
conditions."

Avoiding the effort and time it takes to rid your
garden of invasive plants begins with ensuring the
fauna you're adding to a green space is native to your
area.

Native plants are less likely than invasive ones to
take over your land and impact other plant species,
while they also tend to require little maintenance and
need significantly less water. They will also be more
tolerant to your location's weather conditions.

If you've unfortunately inherited invasive plants,
there's no time like the present to get clearing. This
Redditor received praise from like-minded gardeners for
taking action.

"You're doing good work," one user said, with another
adding: "This is gods work. Keep it up."


Responses:
[19052]


19052


Date: March 18, 2024 at 14:29:17
From: Chuckles, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Dealing with Invasives


Dealing with invasive pest and
plants for many years in my last job
with the government, I probably was
more aware of the matter than the
average person was on how serious of
an issue it is. Lake Tahoe is a good
example of how humans are messing up
the environment( my own opinion is
that Tahoe should never have been
developed, should have been
protected as a National Park,
fools).


Responses:
None


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