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Committing Herbicide Against a Yucca Plant?/Vanity
Me
| 8.19.2005
| Basselope
Posted on 08/19/2005 5:03:49 PM PDT by Basselope
Okay, I know there has to be a way. There just has to be.
We moved into our house 5 years ago, and the previous owners planted some yucca plants. I want to be rid of these...FOREVER. I have tried each year, several times, and I have tried a LOT of different things to kill them, and the darn things just keep coming back!
So far, I've tried:
~Digging up the plants' roots, to a depth of 3.5 feet. They came back.
~Putting boulders on top of the plants. They came back.
~Pouring Round-Up on the leaves. Unfazed.
~Drilling holes and filling them with gasoline. Plants came back.
~Chopping them to the ground, covering with thick black plastic. Plants sent shoots out the sides.
~Cursing them.
~Burning them.
I have HAD it with these plants! Please, if you have any suggestions or can tell me what has worked for YOU, I'd be so grateful!
Oh yeah, the little boy next door was potty-training and couldn't make it inside, so I asked him to pee on the yuccas. Nothing.
I think I hear them snickering every time I walk by.
TOPICS: Gardening
KEYWORDS: chemicals; herbicide; yucca
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1
posted on
08/19/2005 5:03:53 PM PDT
by
Basselope
To: Basselope
Saturate with salt and salt water.
2
posted on
08/19/2005 5:05:04 PM PDT
by
Prime Choice
(E=mc^3. Don't drink and derive.)
To: Basselope
lol let me know when you find the cure!!!
To: Basselope
are there any plants that can act as a predator to this yucca plant?
something that would take over and not allow it to grow perhaps?
the idiots that owned my house before I bought it from there put frikin Kudzu in the back yard. They were semi-diligent about burning it back, but they didn't have a privacy fence, which I do now.
I have to take the weed whacker to it every couple weeks. I rototill ed it yesterday and I hope the grass seed will take hold and kill it....I hope I hope....
To: Basselope
Aren't Yucca plants protected? Sounds crazy hugh, but on U.S. forest land, you better not try to cut one down.
Best way I've found to kill plant life is water it, cut the weeds, trim it and try to get it to look real nice on the property.
5
posted on
08/19/2005 5:07:41 PM PDT
by
DoughtyOne
(US socialist liberalism would be dead without the help of politicians who claim to be conservative.)
To: Basselope
Have you tried placing a picture of Jane Fonda by it?
6
posted on
08/19/2005 5:08:30 PM PDT
by
DoughtyOne
(US socialist liberalism would be dead without the help of politicians who claim to be conservative.)
To: Basselope
7
posted on
08/19/2005 5:09:13 PM PDT
by
tet68
( " We would not die in that man's company, that fears his fellowship to die with us...." Henry V.)
To: Basselope
8
posted on
08/19/2005 5:09:13 PM PDT
by
Keith in Iowa
(Liberals...they're so quixotic...)
To: Basselope
I have no remedy. However, let me warn you that you should remove the flower stalk as soon as it's done blooming or the seeds will drift and reseed.
I've used every method you mentioned (except peeing, hadn't thougth of that) and I still have mine. The tap root is probably 5 ft long, which explains why we can't get them dug out.
9
posted on
08/19/2005 5:10:14 PM PDT
by
Iowa Granny
(friends are quiet angels who lift us to our feet when our wings have trouble remembering how to fly.)
To: Basselope
Overplant the Yucca with ivy. In a few years the Yucca will be gone....and your fun with ivy begins.
10
posted on
08/19/2005 5:10:45 PM PDT
by
crazyhorse691
( Heaven on Earth is where the nearest Starbucks is 60 miles away.)
To: Basselope
Try a different herbicide. Crossbow or Finale may work. I would cut the plant back and paint the concentrate on the cuts.
It might take several attempts, but you'll get it.
If all else fails call in a licensed commercial spray contractor. They have access to restricted herbicides that will kill just about anything.
To: Basselope
1. Borrow a cow.
2. cover it with a clear plastic bag that will trap the heat of the sun.
12
posted on
08/19/2005 5:13:12 PM PDT
by
js1138
(Science has it all: the fun of being still, paying attention, writing down numbers...)
To: Basselope
What did we ever do to you, you anti-Yuccaist !
13
posted on
08/19/2005 5:14:37 PM PDT
by
fieldmarshaldj
(*Fightin' the system like a $2 hooker on crack*)
To: Basselope
Hmm...
You can't get control unless you dig out at least 48 to 72 inches down, making sure you don't leave any tubes in the ground. You can't just grind this type of tree stump up. As to control if you have shoots, spot treat (break off the stand, tends to have like a cup shape pour directly on the spot.)with 2-4-D, turflon of esther or any good broad leaf chem with a non selective such as round up pro. Make sure no water in area for at least 3 dys. This is what has worked for me.
14
posted on
08/19/2005 5:15:33 PM PDT
by
Sweet_Sunflower29
(*shrug* I can't think of anything witty at the moment...)
To: Basselope
Two words....Copper Sulfate.
15
posted on
08/19/2005 5:18:30 PM PDT
by
afnamvet
(Jet Noise...The Sound of Freedom)
To: MikeinIraq; Basselope
Up here, the nemesis is burdock. I have tried everything you tried on the yucca for decades and the burdock comes right back. They have taproots that go all the way to hell, they survive years under black plastic, they wilt momentarily from Roundup.
I have planted mint and Bishop's weed after digging them up and both highly invasive plants do not totally crowd out the burdock.
Since they are growing in areas I am filling with flowers, I am reluctant to try salt,
I will monitor this thread for any good ideas.
Mike, I am not sure you can get rid of kudzu. But maybe if you plant burdock? Just kidding. However, I just had a thought: porcelain berry! It is highly invasive and in warm zones (5 and higher), it covers everything, just like kudzu! However, it has pretty fruit in a variety of blues (it is an Asiatic grape family plant). There is a less invasive variety that is variegated, named Elegans. Just a thought. Up here in the North, people plant it on fences and have to be diligent in pruning it back. I only grow it in containers, though. Birds like the fruit and spread it far and wide.
To: crazyhorse691
LOL! Oh you're cruel! :o)
17
posted on
08/19/2005 5:19:14 PM PDT
by
asp1
To: js1138
1. Borrow a cow. 2. cover it with a clear plastic bag that will trap the heat of the sun.So how exactly does a dead cow in a clear plastic bag kill a Yucca plant?
To: fieldmarshaldj
ACK! There it is!! There it is! OMG, are you outside my house right now, taking pictures of these vile weeds?!?!
To: Basselope
20
posted on
08/19/2005 5:23:49 PM PDT
by
elli1
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