

russ





http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)




http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)


http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)


I also used to have raspberries in my front garden, but dug those up a couple of years ago for that very reason. The roots did go on for miles, and when you think you've got rid of them, they throw another plant up while your not looking - usually through a shrub so you don't notice until it's nice and tall. It was one of those very seldom occasions I resorted to poison, just to get rid of those last ones that were popping up dangerously close to a neighbour's garden.Millymollymandy wrote:I know, each year they spring up in the lawn around this bed, getting further and further away from the original canes.Still I'm only going to use this space for borlotti beans next year, so it's not going to be anything perennial going in. It just needs a good dig cos the strawbs have been there a long time!



What are you going to do with all the shrubs and herbs? I have a huge rosemary that self seeds in the gravel and I keep thinking about replacing it with one of its smaller babies, but after hearing about having to chainsaw the rootsRosendula wrote:Roots! Roots! Don't talk to me about roots. I'll tell you what I'm doing in my front garden/extra-veg-plot-to-be. It used to be all fruit bushes, with a rosemary hedge around it and a few other herbs and things. The rosemary's all out (2 roots dug out by OH, 2 cut below ground level by a neighbour with a chainsaw, and about 6 dug out by me). The rest has all been taken out by me: a huge veronica (who had 2 babies attached, so they have been planted elsewhere), a massive elecampane, 2 redcurrants, a gooseberry, 3 lavenders, a wild rose, several lemon balms, and a very large oregano. I still have a few more lemon balms to go, 2 blackcurrants and a bay tree.I'm chuffing cream crackered I am.
But it feels good
I also used to have raspberries in my front garden, but dug those up a couple of years ago for that very reason. The roots did go on for miles, and when you think you've got rid of them, they throw another plant up while your not looking - usually through a shrub so you don't notice until it's nice and tall. It was one of those very seldom occasions I resorted to poison, just to get rid of those last ones that were popping up dangerously close to a neighbour's garden.Millymollymandy wrote:I know, each year they spring up in the lawn around this bed, getting further and further away from the original canes.Still I'm only going to use this space for borlotti beans next year, so it's not going to be anything perennial going in. It just needs a good dig cos the strawbs have been there a long time!
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)

I've tried to relocate where possible, so I took some root babies from the oregano and planted them in a tub a couple of months before digging up the old plant. I wanted to make sure it took before destroying the 'parent'. Same with some chives, and I took cuttings of rosemary, too.Millymollymandy wrote:What are you going to do with all the shrubs and herbs? I have a huge rosemary that self seeds in the gravel and I keep thinking about replacing it with one of its smaller babies, but after hearing about having to chainsaw the rootsmaybe now I won't!