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What's the best way to get rid of Brambles ... Thank you.?

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What's the best way to get rid of Brambles ... Thank you.?

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  1. Digging them up or weed wacker will not  do the job..a weed wacker will tangle up in them thick canes in 3 seconds..the only way to totally eradictae is get a total foiliar spray ..but this will kill everything you spray it on to include grass..and the soil will be useless there for at least a year...

    A blackberry plant is a prickly, pushy adversary. Mowing, burning-- even bulldozing-- won't faze it. Such strategies cut it down to size, but the plant soon re-sprouts.

    Brutalizing a blackberry bush only invigorates it. The best way to defeat invasive blackberries is to be more persistent than they are, says Larry Forero, livestock/natural resource farm advisor for the University of California Cooperative Extension in Redding.

    "The thing that just amazes me is how quietly invasive they are," Forero says.

    If you have vigorous, expanding plants and you want to get rid of them, you'll be in for a fight.

    "There really are not very many effective options," says Joe DiTomaso, a weed specialist with UC Cooperative Extension in Davis and a member of the California Invasive Plant Council.

    Digging out plants is difficult (and often painful). "You have to get every piece of the root or it comes back," DiTomaso says.

    Mowing stimulates suckers and encourages more branching, according to the UC Integrated Pest Management Program's Pest Notes on blackberries. "If you cut it down, it just comes back with a vengeance," DiTomaso says.

    Burning encourages the plant to re-sprout from rhizomes (horizontal underground shoots). And bulldozing spreads the plant by fragmenting the roots and stems, which then re-sprout in new locations.

    The UC handout says repeatedly tilling the ground ultimately brings success. While rototilling once will fragment the rhizomes and spread the plant, repeatedly tilling eventually eliminates it.

    Herbicides are another option. Glyphosate (Roundup) and triclopyr (Brush-Be-Gone) are available for home use. The best time to apply herbicides is when plants are moving sugars (produced through photosynthesis) from their canes to their roots, Forero says.

    Don't spray when plants have fruit that people might pick and eat, DiTomaso says. But don't wait too long either. When leaves start falling and the plant begins to shut down for winter, herbicides aren't effective. Herbicides are not recommended for drought-stressed blackberry plants, DiTomaso says. Those plants have shut down. If a plant's not active, herbicide won't move through it.

    Applied at the right time, herbicide should kill much of the plant. Hit the sprouts that pop up the next year with herbicide, DiTomaso says. Eventually, the plant should succumb.

    It's important to use the herbicide concentration stated on the label, Forero says. A higher concentration doesn't result in more kill, just more expense. "It makes sense when you use this stuff to read and follow the instructions," he says.

    (Laura Christman of the Redding Record Searchlight in California.)


  2. Dig the roots up.

  3. A strimmer is no good on brambles, you would need a brush cutter or hedge trimmer to get the top off. If you haven't got either, branch loppers.

    Personally I would opt to burn, but if your council has a composting scheme, send it their way.

    Wait for new growth before applying weed killer as this guarantees maximum up take by the roots. Roundup gets a mention and it is good stuff, I would go for a couple of doses of sodium chloride from any garden supplier, but that's your personal preference.

    Now comes the hard bit. You can turn the top over with a rotorvator, but you still have to take a spade and dig the roots out manually. It's like digging rubber.

    Be aware an established bramble patch will have dormant seeds that will have escaped the weed killer. Once you have the land cultivated, you need to watch out for new plants coming up.

    Have fun, it's a horrible job :0)

  4. Personally I would cut them back with a strimmer and then dig out the roots but you could use something like SBK weed killer on them too. It's very strong stuff and is used for tough woody plants, like bramble, and for killing tree stumps.

    If there's a wilkinsons near you I believe they sell it for about £5 a bottle, or did the last time I looked. I'm afraid stuff like roundup, even though it's systemic, just isn't strong enough for brambles.

    Whatever you do, don't rotavate the ground until you've got rid of them or you'll slice up the roots and make the problem even worse.

  5. ~1.

    ask her to leave.

    ~2

    move house

    ~3

    if possible .cut back to the roots.

    then dig up roots.

  6. My mum swears by bleach for unwanted woody plants.

  7. Roundup weedkiller - it takes its time but kills to the roots!

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