The whole reason for the selfsufficientish website was to offer a place where anyone can ask, HOW DO I...? So who knows why it has taken us so long to have a HOW DO I? section, but here it is. So if you want to know how to do anything selfsufficientish then here is the place to ask.
Here in NZ scotish broom is consider a noxious weed and I cannot find anyone who can give advice on uses for it , Rather than waste it I have been thinking about making it into hurdles and garden edging, does anyone know how, or a website that shows how, or a good book
Otherwise I'll have to hire a shredder and spend valuable money on gas to get rid of it
Our remote ancestors said to their mother Earth, "We are yours."
Modern humanity has said to Nature, "You are mine."
The Green Man has returned as the living face of the whole earth so that through his mouth we may say to the universe, "We are one."
I'm not sure what Scottish broom is but I have wild broom with the yellow flowers that self seeds all over the place. It is supposed to repel cabbage white butterflies but I tried that and it doesn't! I think you can also make a spray concoction from it for the same purpose.
You could always make a broom out of it I suppose!
There are supposed to be culinary and medicinal usages for it as well, though I only have the time to glance at some French sites. If you can read French you'll find plenty more useful info if you google 'genet a balais'.
considering the time of year you could make besoms with it and sell them to the little oiks that want to go out dressed up at the end of the month
otherwise books, I found a list Here the hurdle one would be what you need for edgings/fences I guess, the handmade baskets one I have and it tells you what woods you can use (and broom is one of them)
Say what you mean and be who you are, Those who mind don't matter, and those that matter don't mind
gorse seeds and grows insanely fast here in NZ - good on you if you can find a use for it. I would be inclined to destroy it before it took over every inch of my land, if you can get something useful in the process, more power to you!
Jeremy Daniel Meadows. (Jed).
Those who walk in truth and love grow in honour and strength
My gorse has never self seeded, but broom does, everywhere. But then again everything self seeds in my garden including ferns and I've currently got busy lizzies, tomatoes and marigolds coming up all over the place; shame I don't get them self seeding at the right time of year though!
Up here it is, I read that Loch Broom was named for the plants proliferating on its banks, which are covered in gorse. It was a vital part of the economy, used to make roofing, tea, wine and beer and medicine as well as the fine broom besoms.
Maggie
Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin
When you drive past in a car they can look pretty much the same but up close they are very different and flower at different times of the year - gorse flowers in the middle of winter although it stays in flower for a long time, and broom flowers in the late spring then has big bean-like seed pods which pop and fling their seeds all over the place, hence it being invasive. It's short lived though so I don't find it a problem.
Good question! Bit like when someone in NZ was talking about borage being invasive but it wasn't the borage we know, it was Viper's bugloss. This is why Latin names come in handy.