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morning glory invasion

Gardening Reference » Gardening in 2005
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by Winston1 on July 20, 2005 08:29 PM
I have morning glories poping up all over my gardens. How do I get rid of them without harming the plants I want to keep. They do not go away by just pulling them out! Any help would be appreciated. Thanks
by BFVISION on July 24, 2005 07:13 AM
[nutz] The morning glories are always better on the other side...

I have been trying to grow morning glories for some time but the rabbits have other ideas [tongue] . I guess we both have different problems. You must of had seeds spread around by the birds or other wild life droppings. I would say to be patient for now [thinker] since they are annual and remove some of the pods that will sprout on the areas you want to keep.

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BFVISION

http://www.imagestation.com/album/?id=2122269418&mode=guest
by Stormysgrandma on July 25, 2005 10:53 PM
You might have a type of morning glory called field bindweed. It's vicious stuff! I have fought it for 15 years and just recently found out exactly what it is. My local extension office identified it and gave me some advice. They said I got this from bringing in soil or manure from a source that was infested with it. (It was probably the 2 year-old cow manure I got from a local farmer)

A patch of that stuff can create a deep root system that covers a 30 sq.ft. area in one season. That's why just digging, spraying, and pulling occasionally doesn't help. You must immediately spray or pull every sign of the stuff for months, even years, until you starve the root system. It will spread into other areas to find a way to get sunlight. Watch your lawn, bushes, etc.

This stuff is right up there with Canada thistle. In fact, one sight I found said that when a farm field is infested with bindweed it reduces its property value.

I have a pdf that shows the leaves, flowers and seeds of the 2 main types of bindweed, but I can't seem to find a way to paste it into this forum. If anyone can help me, I will provide more pics and illustrations from web sites.

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Stormy
by Winston1 on July 25, 2005 11:30 PM
Thanks for the info even though it is not good news. I will keep spraying and pulling. Right now I am using just a basic weed killer as a spray. Did your local extension have any suggestionas as to what should be used? Thanks, Winston1
by MaryReboakly on July 26, 2005 10:22 AM
Stormy, now I'm concerned. I took a pic of a mystery weed that's growing in my yard near what I thought was morning glories. This one isn't a vine, though the leaves are similar. Does it look like bindweed to you?

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I think I'll go batty if I have something other than green briar to fight with [Frown] Ignorance is bliss [Big Grin] Thanks for any insight!

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by MaryReboakly on July 26, 2005 11:40 AM
Hmm actually, after doing a little more digging, I think it might be buckwheat. Winston, may be that's what you have too...check out this link

buckwheat

Wish there was a way to know before it flowers [dunno]

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by Winston1 on July 26, 2005 07:20 PM
I have never seen the flowers on mine. I think it is the bindweed. I may try some landscape fabric and really thick mulch to try and keep it out of my flower beds. Thanks
by The Plant Doc on July 30, 2005 09:30 PM
Wild morning glories or bindweed are easily killed with 2,4-d, the only problem is that so are almost all other broadleafed plants, so be very careful applying it around your garden. DO NOT use Round-Up as this is systemic and it will also harm your good plants if used to close to them in great amounts.

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Mike Maier
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The Plant Doc
by Winston1 on August 03, 2005 11:57 PM
Is 2,4-d available at a garden center?

Thanks.
by The Plant Doc on August 04, 2005 07:45 PM
Yes many forms of it are. 2.4.D. is just the abrieviation for the active ingredient.
Ortho's Weed-b-Gone is about the most popular of the over the counter formulations. Just follow the directions to the letter. Herbicides are one of those things where "more" is not better.

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Mike Maier
aka
The Plant Doc
by Winston1 on August 05, 2005 03:17 AM
Thanks Mike!

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