The Amazing Story of Kudzu - 1996 Documentary

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • In "The Amazing Story of Kudzu" you’ll learn about kudzu’s colorful past, present and future. Travel from Chipley, Florida - where Glen Arden Nursery sold kudzu plants through the mail in the 1920s - to Covington, Georgia - where Channing Cope crowned kudzu “king” in the 1940s.
    Meet a 93 year old man who supervised Civilian Conservation Corps workers as they planted thousands of acres of kudzu during the Great Depression. See farmers who feed their livestock kudzu, cooks who create kudzu dishes, and artists who weave baskets and make paper from this hardy vine. You’ll meet others who see kudzu as a nuisance and join one man’s ten year long losing battle against one huge kudzu plant.
    Ask any Southerner about this vine and they’ll have something to say about it. They may love it or hate it, but they can’t escape it!
    "The Amazing Story of Kudzu" was originally broadcast on Alabama Public Television, as a part of the weekly series, The Alabama Experience. It was distributed to other Public TV stations nationwide in 1996.
    The documentary was recorded at various locations in the states of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina where kudzu has had its greatest impact.

Komentáře • 93

  • @TheTomBevis
    @TheTomBevis Před 6 lety +28

    The best beef that I have ever eaten came from a calf that we raised on kudzu.
    There was a lot of honeysuckle around, also. cattle love both.

  • @FidelityElectric
    @FidelityElectric Před 3 lety +9

    Kudzu also makes an amazing fertilizer as it is a legume that fixes nitrogen. In a soil test plot in Alabama they grew it for three years then tilled it under. The soil produced more bushels per that acre without additional inputs or amendments for over 10 years. The world record for tomatoes was made using a kudzu fertilizer blend. I use it with chicken and rabbit manure to compost. Gets extremely hot and makes an amazing soil amendment. My newest endeavor is going to be running the vines through a wood chipper to see if I can make a loose mulch that can fertilize at the same time.

  • @alibobber
    @alibobber Před 3 lety +4

    Kudzu saved my life.

  • @ominous-omnipresent-they
    @ominous-omnipresent-they Před 5 lety +4

    I think kudzu is beautiful. It grows amazingly here in Mississippi. I love it.

    • @evisluE
      @evisluE Před 2 lety +1

      I think it's incredibly invasive and kills competition

    • @Seegie16
      @Seegie16 Před 2 lety +2

      I went down to Mississippi for a vacation and it was disappointing how much of the landscape has been swallowed in a see of green vines.

    • @Xassaw
      @Xassaw Před 3 dny

      Obviously, you’re not the one that has to try to get it out of your yard.

  • @notyou1567
    @notyou1567 Před 5 lety +13

    if you can't beat it, eat it.

    • @kdixuebw7884bfb
      @kdixuebw7884bfb Před rokem +2

      Except where they have been bombing it with round-up and other herbicides

    • @shawnmendrek3544
      @shawnmendrek3544 Před 2 měsíci

      haha good point.

    • @Xassaw
      @Xassaw Před 3 dny

      As fast as it grows, you can’t begin to imagine how much and how fast he would have to eat. It literally will grow up to 2 feet a day! Unless you have a high dollar weed eater or a bush hog, you are not going to get it out of your yard with a traditional cheap weedeater. The vines and the strings wrap around the cutter parts and burns your engine out. It’s also so thick and covers the ground so well that snakes and other varmints make their residence in it

  • @jonallie1117
    @jonallie1117 Před 5 lety +7

    Here's an idea for Kudzu. Use prison inmates - start a goat farm at the prison then inmates take the goats to eat the Kudzu. After goats eat up an area then other inmates have to dig up all of the roots and make herbs, starch, breading, kudzu potatoes etc. And others can pick and package the leaves and package for salad type food. Of course, make sure they don't pick poison ivy. Also, prepare the vines for making baskets and/or rope then send to a factory for that purpose and train the inmates to make everything out of this Kudzu then when they get out of prison they have a free resource for making money - even offer company contracts for those whom did a good job upon their release from prison.

  • @seriouslyreally5413
    @seriouslyreally5413 Před 6 lety +12

    Ha!😊count on Southerners to deep fry anything!

  • @Garbagejuicewaterfall
    @Garbagejuicewaterfall Před 6 lety +16

    I want kudzu infested property!

    • @Xassaw
      @Xassaw Před 3 dny

      NO YOU DON’T! I promise you!
      It it a NEVER ENDING BATTLE!

  • @chongque
    @chongque Před 7 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing this, Max, very educational; kudos!

  • @Reincarnation111
    @Reincarnation111 Před 7 lety +8

    fascination story...had never heard of this plant and was researching a substance called pueraria lobata and discovered that it is derived from kudzu. i think that instead of destroying it, we should use it creatively for fodder...and may be to make paper etc. that would be win-win situation; but sadly, so often we overlook and waste such opportunities.

  • @moomoo3031
    @moomoo3031 Před 6 lety +2

    do elephants like Kudzu cuz they would eat it down in no time!!!!! When we were in Mississippi, I took lots of pics for my Kudzu Zoo...especially lots of giraffes and Brontosaurus ..and monsters!!... where it grew up poles and trees 20:08, 25:05 . But I lost all the pics. It has a beautiful flower and is a really pretty plant. My Biology teacher in VA told us to fertilize it with crankcase oil and cinder blocks, and not to sleep in it cuz it would cover you up. This is a delightful video, miss those Suthern axcents, yeah ha ya'll!

  • @CharlotteFairchild
    @CharlotteFairchild Před 3 lety +3

    The Book of Kudzu is free by William Shurtleff on Google Books. ebook. I have 2 blogs on kudzu questions. I am the cousins of David G. Fairchild who married Marian Bell, Alexander Graham Bell's daughter. Fairchild was a scientist with the USDA who brought 200,000+ different kinds of plants to the USA for agriculture. He also supplied the photos the first 2 years National Geographic was published. If you want to hear songs about kudzu, I wrote 2 on youtube. Kudzilla and Kudzu Covered Land. I also invented some recipes that I put on my blog. Kudzu is non-toxic. Noxious does not mean toxic. Meanwhile apple seeds have arsenic and bamboo has cyanide. Go figure!

  • @breadtm1044
    @breadtm1044 Před 7 lety +18

    I just got best idea for a present for my ex! 😉

  • @laydbakk1
    @laydbakk1 Před 6 lety +9

    I think it's just another of those love it/hate it plants depending on which side of the fence you're watching it come from and, go to... I think it has many good uses and, grazing feed it one of the best... As an erosion control measure; well, it works but, like a double edged sword; cuts both ways... There's a high price to pay later on for getting it started... It's a forester's nightmare and, a cattleman's dream... I remember reading a little booklet by a guy who was parodying the South's takeover by Kutzu where someone wanting to plant it for soil erosion asked him what the best fertilizer was to help get it started... He told him to try a combination of cinder blocks and, old power lines... I almost died... lol

    • @Xassaw
      @Xassaw Před 3 dny

      That’s a very accurate assessment.
      God help you if you’re just trying to maintain your yard and you have it, and you don’t have livestock to eat it. If you don’t craft, and you don’t like the taste of it either.

  • @Jefferdaughter
    @Jefferdaughter Před 6 lety +1

    Kudzu is allegedly hardy to -20F or lower. It was lready found in Maryland when this documentary was made, all the way up to the Penn border. Not sure if it is found in Pennsylvania or not.

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 Před 6 lety +3

    I heard it was brought in to control erosion, not as an ornamental.

    • @seahagkeylover
      @seahagkeylover Před 4 lety

      My family has had properties since the beginning of this country and none of them eroded but we are not on the oceans or lakes so I wonder where these people get this erosion theory from but the road that I walked down on our mountainside has been the same since that I can remember and thats 59 years and my father also told me it was the same as when he grew up 85 years ago

  • @roys8870
    @roys8870 Před 6 lety +3

    They know that kudzu tea inhibits the desire for alcohol and it is not yet a standard drink in AA meetings? What is stopping kudzu tea from being more popular?

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 6 lety +1

      In 1995/1996 when I was working on this documentary, a researcher at Harvard Medical School told me that their research showed that a chemical in kudzu root curbed the desire for alcohol but they did not yet know why it had that effect. He said that research showing how it worked would be necessary before FDA approval could be achieved. I haven't followed up on this so I don't know if that has ever been proven. I suspect not.

    • @JoshuaCoffie
      @JoshuaCoffie Před 5 lety +2

      @@MaxShores Maybe a little late to the discussion, but just in case you were wondering where this research is today - www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4510012/

  • @freepalestine6557
    @freepalestine6557 Před 11 měsíci

    The music is too loud!

  • @humbleone6405
    @humbleone6405 Před 6 lety +5

    Will kudzu in a northern climate...like chicago? Maybe it will block my neighbors from my view 😅

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 6 lety +1

      I don't think you would get the amount of growth that warmer climates allow. The growing season will be shorter.

    • @josephbattaglia3690
      @josephbattaglia3690 Před 5 lety +3

      It will grow. Your a bit colder than me but i live near nyc and i got it to grow.

    • @Chilliam13
      @Chilliam13 Před 5 lety

      I'm in nj. I can't stop it. It's all over everything.

  • @niftynan2081
    @niftynan2081 Před 5 lety +1

    Kudzu pulled down my fence. ☹️

  • @Xassaw
    @Xassaw Před 3 dny

    I don’t understand what you’re doing to these vines that make them good for weaving or craft purposes. When I tried making wreaths with the vines, they didn’t make very good wreaths. When the moisture is gone they don’t stay hard and they break apart, also the bark flakes off of it.

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 3 dny

      I'm sorry you haven't gotten good results. Ruth Duncan said she only used kudzu that was growing up trees and power poles and she had to work with it within a week of harvesting or it got too brittle. I've had one of her baskets for nearly 30 years and it is still beautiful.

  • @jakeryker546
    @jakeryker546 Před 5 lety +4

    Breed goats and let em roam free xD

  • @josephbattaglia3690
    @josephbattaglia3690 Před 7 lety +3

    it's really an amazing vine. there's some in ny as well.
    tried growing kudzu by seed is almost impossible

    • @noahwatson1248
      @noahwatson1248 Před 7 lety +1

      Joseph Battaglia how it grows about a foot every day

    • @riplememe4460
      @riplememe4460 Před 6 lety +3

      Presumably germinating the seed is the hard part, not growing on established plants.

    • @seahagkeylover
      @seahagkeylover Před 4 lety +2

      Come to TN and dig yourself a root or two!!!

    • @josephbattaglia3690
      @josephbattaglia3690 Před 4 lety +1

      @@seahagkeylover lol. I'll shall try

    • @FidelityElectric
      @FidelityElectric Před 3 lety

      The most efficient way to sprout from seeds is to scarify the seed with about 5-7 needle tips held together. I have not had success with this but it is supposed to have about a 70% rate to sprout.

  • @eecforeststewardship640
    @eecforeststewardship640 Před 6 lety +9

    rodents with drinking problems? 24:46 lol!

    • @ismofishness8192
      @ismofishness8192 Před 5 lety +1

      I found this to be hilarious as well. I stumbled across an article on an herb that reduced alcohol consumption and then this.

  • @barryfennell9723
    @barryfennell9723 Před 6 lety +2

    After so many generations Americanized Kutzu may be very different from its Native Asian genetics.

  • @peaceandlove5214
    @peaceandlove5214 Před 4 lety +1

    If you turn it to profitable material and pay money to people to cut it you will get red of it quicker.

  • @Reincarnation111
    @Reincarnation111 Před 7 lety

    to me their lush green color looks very lovely...but i suppose it is upsetting if all other trees and shrubs are
    completely thwarted by it. wish i could grow it as ground cover on a hill on the side of my house.

    • @robertcscott6624
      @robertcscott6624 Před 6 lety

      dont do it it will take over a lot more than the hill

  • @futurecaredesign
    @futurecaredesign Před 5 lety

    If anyone has any information on how this plant does in the Mediterranean climate I would be most grateful.

    • @poilochien
      @poilochien Před 5 lety +2

      not so good than monsoon climat ... in northen italy alpen, there are some kudzu growing savagely .

    • @futurecaredesign
      @futurecaredesign Před 5 lety

      @@poilochien Thank you very much for your reply. Do you know if it spreads by seed? All reports from the US say that they only spread through vegetative means (cuttings or branches rooting in place).

    • @poilochien
      @poilochien Před 5 lety +2

      @@futurecaredesign generaly, savage kudzu cames from kufzu cultivated for décorative plants and running away ... at my knowledge, pueraria never used as fooder in europe.

  • @chriscook215
    @chriscook215 Před 4 lety

    I’ve heard you can eat all parts ?

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 4 lety

      The roots can be ground into a powder that is like corn starch. I've eaten jelly made from the blooms. Although I've tried eating the leaves, I'll leave them for grazing animals.

    • @FidelityElectric
      @FidelityElectric Před 3 lety

      All parts of the plant are edible except for the seeds and seed pod husk. Like a hairy edamame seed husk.

  • @davidcarlisle3384
    @davidcarlisle3384 Před 5 lety

    Hi 👋 cuz

  • @kdixuebw7884bfb
    @kdixuebw7884bfb Před rokem

    The chemicals aren't working

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před rokem

      What are you trying to do and what chemicals are you using?

    • @kdixuebw7884bfb
      @kdixuebw7884bfb Před rokem

      @@MaxShores I mean generally and with regard to the bigger picture. It's time we moved away from chemicals and started embracing more goats! Kudzu is amazing stuff !

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před rokem +1

      There are some fields of kudzu in which goats would get so tangled they could not move! If the vines are cut back, goats can keep the new growth under control.

    • @nickwilson8429
      @nickwilson8429 Před rokem +1

      @@MaxShores Wishful thinking... The task is more than goats or humans can manage.

  • @seahagkeylover
    @seahagkeylover Před 4 lety

    Not good for people with liver issues...beware

  • @momdoan
    @momdoan Před 3 lety +1

    solution: free range goats, cattle and pigs

  • @GabrielKnightz
    @GabrielKnightz Před 7 lety

    Why are we not funding this???

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 7 lety

      Funding what?

    • @moomoo3031
      @moomoo3031 Před 6 lety

      they did fund it once for erosion control, and look what happened, LOL

  • @poilochien
    @poilochien Před 5 lety

    plants will save the planet ... (°0°) stupid bear !

  • @Boulderpits
    @Boulderpits Před 7 lety +1

    Roundup will kill an elephant. Will it not work on Kudzu?

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 7 lety +4

      My research for this documentary was in the early 1990s. At that time Roundup was not considered effective against kudzu. I don't know if the roundup product has changed since then.

    • @RamdomView
      @RamdomView Před 6 lety

      What was the dosage in that experiment? Anything can kill anything given large enough doses.

    • @vegascolors
      @vegascolors Před 6 lety +1

      My elephant killed all my kodzu.

    • @brianjonker510
      @brianjonker510 Před 6 lety

      Round up typically has poor control on vines if used by itself. If mowed first then the new growth is sprayed roundup does much better. Two or three times for two years ought to do it in. Still have seeds in the soil will sprout over the next dozen years.

    • @MrBojangles788
      @MrBojangles788 Před 6 lety

      I got the poster print of your man with no name picture

  • @TONYURT
    @TONYURT Před 7 lety +2

    INVASION??? INVASIVE??? ABUNDANCE?

  • @CharlotteFairchild
    @CharlotteFairchild Před 7 lety

    Who first brought kudzu to the USA? Was it David G. Fairchild? Did anyone ever take credit?

    • @MaxShores
      @MaxShores  Před 7 lety +2

      The Japanese government brought it to the U. S. in 1876 as part of a garden display in Philadelphia.

    • @CharlotteFairchild
      @CharlotteFairchild Před 7 lety

      So the people in Japan brought it to the USA! www.kudzus.blogspot.com is one of my 14 blogs. I am proud of your video! There is recent research that it detoxes the liver by western double bind tests in peer reviewed journals and is great for the liver and pancreas. I use it often.

  • @stavinaircaeruleum2275

    Burn it!

  • @shudrakebab8583
    @shudrakebab8583 Před 5 lety +3

    just like muslims

  • @TimLucasdesign
    @TimLucasdesign Před 7 lety

    Horrible stuff!

  • @russg1801
    @russg1801 Před 6 lety +1

    This crap should never have been brought into the country. Biiiiig mistake!

    • @pokeweed10k15
      @pokeweed10k15 Před 5 lety

      Why?

    • @TomFoolery_Escobar
      @TomFoolery_Escobar Před rokem

      Exactly its taken over my home town here in alabama. All the old houses there have been taken over by kudzu…if you dont do regular cutting around your house itll take over your house. It makes my home town look like no one lives there.

  • @eScential
    @eScential Před 10 měsíci

    Antidipsotropic