Mares Tail
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I don't think there's is way to eradicate it, you might reduce it, but it has been around since before the dinosaurs
Been gardening for over 65 years and still learning.
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I bought a weed killer from amazon which worked but it was very expensive £40 for half a liter I think you watered down to 4to1 ,now I have a gas torch the long wand one I go round at the first sign burning them it works but it's a constant job when they first appear
- Tony Hague
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I can sympathise, I have it too.
Chemical controls - glyphosate has limited effect, it is not absorbed well. Pelargonic acid will kill the foliage above ground, but isn't systemic. Glufosinate ammonium is effective, but isn't available to amateurs
The problem with mechanical methods is that the extent of the plant is deeper that you can dig it out from, and probably spreads beyond your plot. So even if you can prevent it from seeing the light of day, unless all your neighbours do likewise it will be able to get its energy somewhere.
Best to learn to live with it. It is not greatly competitive, and prefers poor soil. So add lots of organic matter to tip the balance in favour of your crops. Cut off the tops and leave in the sun / wind, they will quickly desiccate and can be crumbled into the compost bin. Because the roots go down fo ever, they can bring up useful minerals.
We did get rid of it from our garden. At the bottom was a paddock of waterlogged Bedfordshire clay. Once the property developers had dug out several feet of earth to build houses on it, a lot of the mares tail was removed from there, but it also dried out our garden a lot, which also helped. So improved drainage is good too. That and digging it up with a JCB !
Chemical controls - glyphosate has limited effect, it is not absorbed well. Pelargonic acid will kill the foliage above ground, but isn't systemic. Glufosinate ammonium is effective, but isn't available to amateurs
The problem with mechanical methods is that the extent of the plant is deeper that you can dig it out from, and probably spreads beyond your plot. So even if you can prevent it from seeing the light of day, unless all your neighbours do likewise it will be able to get its energy somewhere.
Best to learn to live with it. It is not greatly competitive, and prefers poor soil. So add lots of organic matter to tip the balance in favour of your crops. Cut off the tops and leave in the sun / wind, they will quickly desiccate and can be crumbled into the compost bin. Because the roots go down fo ever, they can bring up useful minerals.
We did get rid of it from our garden. At the bottom was a paddock of waterlogged Bedfordshire clay. Once the property developers had dug out several feet of earth to build houses on it, a lot of the mares tail was removed from there, but it also dried out our garden a lot, which also helped. So improved drainage is good too. That and digging it up with a JCB !
I remember Johnboy saying that whichever weed killer you use, better results will be achieved if the plant is crushed or bruised before aplying. Please, please, please, come back Johnboy, you were such a help to us all.
Regards,
Gerry.
Regards,
Gerry.
Many years ago, we had an allotment with mares tail which we attacked by all means available then (including first crushing the plants before applying weedkiller). We never did get rid of it all but learnt to live with it which isn't too bad because it sort of collapses in mid-summer and then the top growth disappears.
My wife wanted her own plot, she managed to get one just up from our other one, the lady that had it before didn't plant much in it but did know how to grow mares tail, we had to take up all of the slabbed paths, we double dug the whole plot some of the roots went down further, so we dug down to get as much of the root as possible, now only time will tell, as soon as it shows its head dig it out.
It's actually remarkably easy to erradicate marestail, but you do need a bit of patience.
You use ammonium sulphamate, which is a compost activator. Mix 200g with one litre of water and spray the area where the weed is. Because the plant thinks this is ammonium sulphate, it will absorb it as feed and then die, right the way down to the roots. You may get some regrowth on the same site, since marestail emits spores that can live on, but usually that's the problem solved.
WARNING: ammonium sulphamate is a compost activator, which means it remains active in the soil for about three months. In other words, anything you plant there during that time will die. You know the ground is safe to use when weeds begin to emerge again. The sulphamate breaks down into fertiliser, so win-win!
Look for ammonium sulphamate on ebay, but don't confuse it with "sulphate", although you can use this stuff too, since it will increase the fertility of the soil and marestail hates that.
If you have marestail on a grass path, simply keep mowing; it cannot survive continual attrition and dies naturally.
You use ammonium sulphamate, which is a compost activator. Mix 200g with one litre of water and spray the area where the weed is. Because the plant thinks this is ammonium sulphate, it will absorb it as feed and then die, right the way down to the roots. You may get some regrowth on the same site, since marestail emits spores that can live on, but usually that's the problem solved.
WARNING: ammonium sulphamate is a compost activator, which means it remains active in the soil for about three months. In other words, anything you plant there during that time will die. You know the ground is safe to use when weeds begin to emerge again. The sulphamate breaks down into fertiliser, so win-win!
Look for ammonium sulphamate on ebay, but don't confuse it with "sulphate", although you can use this stuff too, since it will increase the fertility of the soil and marestail hates that.
If you have marestail on a grass path, simply keep mowing; it cannot survive continual attrition and dies naturally.
I was given a small plot of land to keep chickens on which was covered in mares tail. One day I noticed it had gone, I guess the chickens just kept pecking away at it until it gave up! Down side of keeping chickens in a large run, they soon adopt a bare earth policy!!
Hilary
Hilary
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Persistent removal works eventually whether by digging it up, poisoning it or letting the chickens deal with it. It's a pity that my chickens ignore the nettles in their run and there's not much other greenery surviving.
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Apparently nettles make nice eating this time of year!!
Been gardening for over 65 years and still learning.
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I've eaten them cooked like spinach with butter on but wasn't keen on the rough texture and I've made some excellent nettle beer in the past. It's just one more thing to deal with and I'm struggling to keep up. If I win the lottery I'll employ a gardener, my partner can't follow instructions.
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robo wrote:I've tried burning with a gas torch this reduced the number but not completely this year I'm trying Singh then spraying or should I say dribbling weed killer on them
Soo.
The plan is to make them Sikh then kill them?
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