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Thank you Chris and Cheryl...I'm on it! Joanie
In a message dated 6/30/2014 9:16:28 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
1002@rewrite.hort.net writes:
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Original Message ----- > Iâve had some luck with vinegar. I have a
friend that swore by > boiling water.
I second Cheryl's vinegar
solution, although a stronger vinegar solution is best. Thistle is
especially vulnerable to vinegar, but many other plants will be unfazed by
the ~5% strength stuff that you can buy in the store.
20%
concentration is much more effective, and it's actually available online
from many different suppliers. You could pay $25 for a gallon with
shipping through Amazon, but local farm supply companies might have it for
less.
Whether you go with 5% or 20% vinegar, adding a little
dishwashing soap to the solution will help it stick to leaves and break
down any oils the plant might use as a defense. Just mix it all up, put
it in a sprayer, and spray the leaves of whatever you want to kill.
Whatever it touches will be damaged or killed, although you might have to
respray later if new growth comes up from the base.
I've seen some
online recipes that involve salt, but I won't use it because it could
affect the soil and many of my plants have salt sensitivity.
Here's
an older article about it:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2002/020515.htm
For sidewalk cracks I've
also used a blowtorch (mostly because it's fun burning weeds). It
didn't work very well in the garden.
And, of course, there's the old
Borax trick for removing creeping charlie:
http://www.extension.umn.edu/yardandgarden/ygbriefs/h519borax.html
Just
make sure that you don't do it too often or else everything will die from
boron toxicity.
I hope that
helps!
Chris
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