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16 Invasive Species Sold at Garden Centers You Should Never Buy

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  • čas přidán 31. 07. 2024
  • Most of us gardeners assume that the people that run our local garden center are knowledgeable and know exactly what they're selling - and for the most part, that's true. But what happens when some of the most commonly sold plants also happen to be some of the most invasive?
    Due to the globalization of our society, it's become very easy to get plants from different areas of the world, grow them, and sell them to gardeners everywhere.
    Here's a list of 16 of the most commonly sold invasive species. Watch out for them next time you're browsing for a new plant for the yard!
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Komentáře • 2,1K

  • @LeanneFan8
    @LeanneFan8 Před 4 lety +555

    Bruh my neighbor has Chinese wisteria growing on bamboo. The wisteria climbs on the bamboo. The ultimate invasive combo

    • @improbablytired7414
      @improbablytired7414 Před 4 lety +10

      Lol 😂

    • @Grouundedkidz
      @Grouundedkidz Před 4 lety +8

      Lol, do they have an outdoor kitchen & chickens?

    • @LeanneFan8
      @LeanneFan8 Před 4 lety +4

      @@Grouundedkidz no I don’t think so

    • @slimmette
      @slimmette Před 4 lety +16

      Hunt Mike bruh that’s racist AF

    • @Silverhineko
      @Silverhineko Před 4 lety +8

      Well, I guess that's one way of having a plant privacy fence/wall

  • @angelalibi1
    @angelalibi1 Před 5 lety +140

    So, I'm watching this a year later and this is a lesson I JUST learned as a new gardener!! Just because you CAN grow it, doesnt mean you SHOULD! LOL! Because my land is in West Texas,of course I'm looking for plants and trees that are hardy and drought tolerant. Of course i wen on Ebay and Amazon and put all kinds of stuff on my lists. Now I'm realizing i have a delicate ecosystem and i need to be careful what i introduce. I'm learning a lot by going to the Ag sites and getting information about what is safe to plant and what I shouldn't introduce. I think that's a good hunt for people. Their local Ag office extension will have exactly what they need to have a great beneficial yard. We live and learn......sometimes too late......ie. carp....who knew??? Lol! Great video, I didnt mind the format at all. Thank you.

    • @winifredthompson2470
      @winifredthompson2470 Před 4 lety +4

      Why don't you plant fruit trees they are none invasive, Every Spring you will have lovely blossom, and in the Autumn you will have loads of fruit to pick, and if you don't want to pick the fruit, the birds will enjoy them, and the bees will enjoy the blooms in the spring. I am sure there must be some fruit trees that would suit Texas. Hope this helps you. Greetings from Northern Ireland.

    • @angelalibi1
      @angelalibi1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@winifredthompson2470 thank you, I am going to plant some and also grow in massive containers. The land out there is full of clay and very dry but it it possible. Currently I am still in New Yoek City so all I can do is plan and garden in my apartment. I am planning to start buying my trees here and nurture them in the apartment as seedling.

    • @winifredthompson2470
      @winifredthompson2470 Před 4 lety +1

      @@angelalibi1 Dear Natacha, I would wait till you move to your new Farm, dig a good big hole at least 2 times the size of the root of the tree you are planting, put,plenty of peat and good honest cow manueur into it, not fertiliser. Fill the hole with water and put your young tree into the hole and put the clay soil around it, you can improve your soil if you can get somebody to leave you a load of chicken peat manueur, don't worry about feathers in it, that will all break down to soil improvers. You will probably be able to get a load of this stuff for nothing, and if you dig it into your clay soil it really improves it. You know that when you,put in young trees you will need to keep them well watered for a little while till they get established. Ask in Texas, what is the best breed of tree for that type of environment, you might be told orange grove, lemon grove etc,
      This is my advice to you. I wish you all the best. Winifred, Thompson, Lisburn, Co.Antrim, Northern Ireland.

    • @angelalibi1
      @angelalibi1 Před 4 lety

      @@winifredthompson2470 thank you! I have since learned about building up my soil and about bone meal, feather meal, chicken manure (a magical substance 🤣) and Rabbit manure. I have been using fish emulsion on my garden and started my own compost. I am loving the process! Thank you for you help! I have written it down!💚💚💚

    • @angelalibi1
      @angelalibi1 Před 4 lety

      @@winifredthompson2470 I am planning a number of fruit trees. I have found that they will actually grow and like the clay with some ammending.

  • @christines3638
    @christines3638 Před 4 lety +323

    When I was first married, we bought a house. I planted some wisteria. My new neighbor was a lovely older man. He came to my front door with a lilac bush. He offered to plant it for me if I would let him rip out my kudzu.

    • @annak804
      @annak804 Před 4 lety +76

      Smart neighbor

    • @potatopotatoeOG
      @potatopotatoeOG Před 3 lety +33

      Haha I like him 😄

    • @kaloarepo288
      @kaloarepo288 Před 3 lety +12

      lilac is invasive too -it suckers up everwhere

    • @hanoianboy9562
      @hanoianboy9562 Před 3 lety +4

      @@kaloarepo288 it is native in her area?

    • @TheWBWoman
      @TheWBWoman Před 3 lety +18

      @@kaloarepo288 Not like wisteria. Lilac is easy to trim back. Wisteria pops up EVERYWHERE! I find wisteria sending out 50 foot vines and I live way up north. It has to be total kudzu down south.

  • @IndieUSA
    @IndieUSA Před 3 lety +74

    The 16 invasive species mentioned in this video are: Chinese Wisteria, Bamboo, Winter Creeper, English Ivy, Japanese Honeysuckle, Winged Bruning Bush, Nandina / Sacred Bamboo (toxic berries too), Chinese Privet, Autumn Olive, Bardford Pear Tree, Common Perrywinkle / Vinca, Japanese Barberry, Princess Tree / Royal Paulownia, Sweet Autumn Clamatis, Weeping Lovegrass and Japanese Meadowsweet.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před rokem +1

      And add spiderwort, plantain hostas and a sedum called steppables-Ugh! They are impossible to eradicate.
      I have the sweet autumn clematis and it died back so it isn’t a problem after 3 years.

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@dustyflats3832 Spiderwort is native to North America. Just because a plant is aggressive and hard to control in gardens doesn't mean it's invasive. It has to be nonnative to be invasive; otherwise it's just aggressive. All environments need some fast-growing aggressive species to be able to recover from disruptions and handle heavy herbivory.
      Hostas are not native to the US, but they're not considered invasive in most of the country because they don't take over habitats and the native wildlife (especially deer) easily keep them in check. They're an introduced species, not an invasive species. Oddly enough, spiderwort is one of the plant suggested to replace hostas if you want native shade plants.
      Sedum is a genus with 400-500 plants, some of which are native to the US. Steppables is a brand that sells plants for use in grass-free lawns. They sell a variety of sedums, so it's impossible to tell which species you're referring to.

    • @dustyflats3832
      @dustyflats3832 Před 6 měsíci

      @@pendlera2959 whatever. If it is from here or not-anything that starts spreading Everywhere IS invasive. Potato potato.

  • @MightySapphire
    @MightySapphire Před 5 lety +1523

    This video should be called "16 plant species growing in my yard that the previous home owner planted because she owned her own nursery. " Or just "My Daily Nightmare."

    • @autumnbottoms5743
      @autumnbottoms5743 Před 5 lety +23

      MightySapphire 😂😂😂 You are hilarious! So true! Lol 👏😩

    • @kimonk
      @kimonk Před 5 lety +25

      Me too!! I just shared this video on facebook with almost the same comment! (Luckily we don’t have bamboo though!)

    • @poppyaustin7315
      @poppyaustin7315 Před 5 lety +18

      I've got rid of many of them after previous owner, but I can only keep an ivy in reasonable size.
      Have I missed here Buddleya? I don't have it, but my neighbours have, so it is fight with its seedling each year.

    • @susanmetz9892
      @susanmetz9892 Před 4 lety +29

      MightySapphire. Your comment is both funny and sad. I fight my neighbors bamboo and the natural honeysuckle. On the bright side, all that exercise is good for me.

    • @foreverkenzie2397
      @foreverkenzie2397 Před 4 lety +4

      Same

  • @Waiting4Him111
    @Waiting4Him111 Před 5 lety +739

    The only invasive species in my garden is a gopher! That jerk eats everything. I am convinced if I put out fake plants, he would eat those too.

    • @dustinb1070
      @dustinb1070 Před 5 lety +36

      Your gopher is a native species

    • @Waiting4Him111
      @Waiting4Him111 Před 5 lety +2

      @Joe Smith Thank you Joe! I will give these a try😊

    • @lyssbeth
      @lyssbeth Před 4 lety +4

      😂😂

    • @HBO1984.
      @HBO1984. Před 4 lety +1

      Here in Houston Texas Ive never seen a gopher but I do have to contend with insect size invaders.

    • @Waiting4Him111
      @Waiting4Him111 Před 4 lety +7

      @@HBO1984. maybe I will have to move to Texas. Now I have a bunny fighting with the gopher to see who can cause the most damage in my garden😡 what insects do you have a problem with in Houston?

  • @samanthaschurter747
    @samanthaschurter747 Před 4 lety +221

    I’d like to see a video about how to get rid of these invasive species without resorting to poison.

    • @bobbun9630
      @bobbun9630 Před 4 lety +6

      Mowing will keep most of them under control, at least in the confines of your yard, if the location is suitable for mowing. Cut down the plant, keep the area mowed. A few of these have widely scattered seeds, which is a bigger problem since you can't mow the entire environment. Also, if you're mowing something like bamboo--it will keep sending up shoots in the lawn for quite some time, but if it doesn't have any unmowed areas to support the growth it will eventually die.

    • @bratmari
      @bratmari Před 4 lety +4

      I've killed leaves on my houseplant when dish soap and vinegar touched them. I've thought about spreading dish soap or bleach on some weeds but I have not tried it yet.

    • @natureselement7588
      @natureselement7588 Před 4 lety

      Me too

    • @meaganwallwork5395
      @meaganwallwork5395 Před 3 lety +8

      Boiling water might work for some of them.

    • @sarab3888
      @sarab3888 Před 3 lety +7

      I got rid of weeds on the side of the house by spraying it with white vinegar.
      Just fill a spray bottle and go to town on them.

  • @blackstar8620
    @blackstar8620 Před 4 lety +16

    I learned so much about this problem from Doug Tallamy videos and books 4 years ago when I got into outdoor gardening. I'm still pulling up ivy and periwinkle each year but I've planted so many native species of trees, shrubs and perennials. I've seen such a big difference in the amount of birds, butterflies and bees on my property now. Thank you for bringing attention to this ongoing problem🇨🇦✌️ choose natives whenever possible and ask the garden centres about alternatives to these invasives

  • @lelynnkoch8183
    @lelynnkoch8183 Před 5 lety +235

    Invasives have more impact than just one homeowners yard. Some viewers don't seem to understand that these plants have seeds or berries that birds and wildlife drop in other areas. The plants become monocultures in natural areas. Invasives are a predominant reason that so many species appear on the endangered species list. Another example of human-caused habitat destruction.

    • @PamsPrettyPlants
      @PamsPrettyPlants Před 5 lety +11

      LeLynn Koch I’m living in vine hell because of neighbors that refuse to manage their collection of invasive species 😅

    • @thomastucker5686
      @thomastucker5686 Před 4 lety +7

      Humans fit the definition of invasive species.

    • @TheBralleyBunch
      @TheBralleyBunch Před 4 lety +2

      LeLynn Koch welcome to America!

    • @tornado100able
      @tornado100able Před 3 lety +3

      I don't really care! I love my invasive plants! If they spread to the whole world blame nature for making them so adaptable 🤣🤣🤣 well soon or later they will dominate all the places anyways but i really think probably a new plague would appear to control their "excess" in an eventual scenario like this because that's how mother nature seems to work... Human's activities and destruction of forests for example are way more concerning not to the word (Earth will continue existing), but for ourselves and many other creatures!

    • @cattfishing
      @cattfishing Před 3 lety

      @@thomastucker5686 how so?

  • @tashabattaglino1887
    @tashabattaglino1887 Před 4 lety +751

    Me: what a pretty plant!
    You: dont buy this! It grows quickly and will not die!
    Me(and my brown thumb) : 🤔you dont say...

    • @petuniafuzz9083
      @petuniafuzz9083 Před 4 lety +42

      That is funny. I can testify to the truth about the English Ivy. I planted 4 small containers years ago on the North side of the house. I must trim it at least once a year and remove it from my Japanese Maple tree or it will damage the house and my favorite tree.
      I think it attracts or harbors mosquitoes.😬

    • @wcdeich4
      @wcdeich4 Před 4 lety +20

      I think we need a more advanced way of looking at this. Any imported species that directly kills local plants or animals is a destructive invasive species. Like vines that kill trees by shading out all the light - yes - they are very bad & we should shop importing them & try to get rid of them as much as possible. And knapweed is toxic to both cattle & other plants - gotta do everything possible to control & reduce its population!!! However, when it come to bushes & trees that are only competing for space on the ground space by growing - plants naturally compete

    • @wcdeich4
      @wcdeich4 Před 4 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/dfgm76_7wnY/video.html

    • @Chickenmom777
      @Chickenmom777 Před 4 lety

      Tasha Battaglino 🤣🤣

    • @notdonebaking
      @notdonebaking Před 4 lety +6

      Right? You say “invasive” I hear “hard to call”.

  • @LindaCBMediaGroup
    @LindaCBMediaGroup Před 4 lety +11

    My grandparents planted the bamboo, and it took over the yard! We found where the roots were running under the foundation of the house. It grew from the woodline across the backyard, into the side yard and the front yard too. Some of the roots running horizontally across the yards were a couple of inches across. When I sold that property, it was to friends, who already knew what was there.

  • @lyndapurcell4450
    @lyndapurcell4450 Před 4 lety +2

    My husband bought wisteria to plant on our newly built pergola. It took three (3) years to destroy Mayflower beds...my neighbors. Garden and even under ...through our pond. And up in my other neighbors yard..we spent a fortune...and countless hours trying
    to fight it.I finally had to destroy my soil tear it out and start from scratch. Good luck and God Bless

  • @sydneyb.267
    @sydneyb.267 Před 5 lety +258

    I'll be digging up half the yard this weekend.

    • @moonistew
      @moonistew Před 5 lety +2

      digging, digging, ....hahaha 😂

    • @libraryofpangea7018
      @libraryofpangea7018 Před 4 lety +11

      Don't dig. Sheet mulch with cardboard & a thick lair of well broken down woodchips. You may be able to get it free from local landscaping companies.
      It's much more affective at smothering weeds and prior invasives then trying to dig everything up, is alot less work, & will improve your soil for growing.

    • @tinkerbelle6936
      @tinkerbelle6936 Před 4 lety +2

      Akariel not to mention a good chunk of invasives prefer newly or consistently disturbed soil

    • @libraryofpangea7018
      @libraryofpangea7018 Před 4 lety +5

      @@tinkerbelle6936
      Yup, and some weed seeds can stay in the soil for as long as 50 years.
      When you till, you're kicking all those seeds back up to germinate.
      That's the roll most of those first and secondary succession plants ,people consider weeds, play within ecology.
      They're first responders to major enviromental change, erosion & compaction.
      Such as bracken ferns after a forest fire.

    • @lottiepopspalace4994
      @lottiepopspalace4994 Před 3 lety

      Most of these things I have in my yard 😟

  • @Ms7of8
    @Ms7of8 Před 5 lety +13

    I work at a large nursery and discourage people from buying/growing wisteria unless they plan to train it into a tree. I provide full disclosure that wisteria is very invasive and can break-up concrete. Additionally, I ALWAYS strongly recommend against planting English Ivy and bamboo to my customers. With regards to the latter, I tell them that the rhizomes can pop up in their neighbors' yards and several blocks away to others. When that doesn't seem to phase them, I let them know that the bamboo can invade their underground piping/plumbing systems and has the potential to cause thousands upon thousands of dollars in damages to their homes. That makes them walk away REAL fast from the bamboo, and with good reason.

    • @azraikezoe388
      @azraikezoe388 Před 5 lety +4

      Ms7of8 love your explanation!

    • @friend-of-furbies
      @friend-of-furbies Před 5 lety

      Can you grow bamboo in containers? If you can, that should save all the headaches and nightmares, right?

    • @Ms7of8
      @Ms7of8 Před 5 lety +2

      @@friend-of-furbies Yes. The containers are generally placed underground and made of heavy-gauge metal, as the bamboo is so invasive, it can even break through metal. One can also use above-ground containers, but that will limit the size of the bamboo, generally by 50 to 75% smaller than in the ground. However, there are over 1,400 varieties of bamboo, so you can always find a few that might meet your criteria for growing well in containers as well as your hardiness zone. Note that you will have to water it more frequently, if the bamboo is planted in a container, which is a finite amount of space and will more quickly dehydrate.

    • @friend-of-furbies
      @friend-of-furbies Před 5 lety +1

      @@Ms7of8 I see, thank you for responding! Bamboo is so intense lol

    • @Ms7of8
      @Ms7of8 Před 5 lety +1

      @@friend-of-furbies You welcome and quite right re: bamboo !

  • @TamarLitvot
    @TamarLitvot Před 4 lety +222

    When we moved into our house in Maryland there was a pretty stand of bamboo planted by the previous owners. Over the next 5-6 years it totally took over our yard so we had no space and no other plants. We made a neighbor very angry with us when we refused to give him shoots - - he lived on the edge of our big woodsy park (Rock Creek Park)and we didn’t want the bamboo invading that beautiful park.
    We had to get a contractor in with a backhoe to dig it out of our yard which was enormously expensive. We kept getting shoots for years.
    When I see bamboo in someone’s yard I shudder.

    • @shaestheticsss
      @shaestheticsss Před 4 lety +9

      lol I'm in MD & when I lived in Takoma Park we had a ton of Bamboo in our backyard that I actually miss now

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj Před 4 lety +22

      Be aware, there are two basic types of bamboo, those that spread via their roots, and those that do not. So you don’t need to always shudder. 8 ). I have a non spreading variety that I have been coddling for five years, it is just a tiny bit bigger than when I got it.

    • @ElizabethRhyner
      @ElizabethRhyner Před 4 lety +6

      In in Seattle and my neighbors down the street just cut all of their bamboo that was going crazy. Thankfully got myself a stick to go (gonna dry it for decor!)

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj Před 4 lety +11

      Elizabeth as a gardener I prize bamboo for support poles, it lasts for years, is very tough, I go “trim” my son’s bamboo every year and keep a bunch of the best poles for that purpose. He keeps threatening to take it out, but he is not that ambitious. His is a very old stand, but very stable , has not increased in the five years he has been in the house. Good for you getting some for decor. It is a cool plant, though no doubt can get out of control. If you want to have a panic attack, look up a video, put in the search something like worker building bamboo scaffolding. It is widely used in Asia for that purpose.

    • @dannac_8888
      @dannac_8888 Před 3 lety +15

      @@lilolmecj
      Oh thank goodness!
      Someone who knows what they're doing with bamboo. If you only barley research a plant and call it bad or invasive when there are hundreds of species, you do the entire bamboo family an injustice. When you plant bamboo that can throw runners you must place 3'-4' barriers inset into the ground to ensure it's growth is CONTROLLED. Consult PROFESSIONAL arborists (like my fiancee) to learn or Morakami Gardens in Delray Beach, Florida.
      To say ALL bamboo is invasive is just plain wrong. To identify your plant and then understand its habits is being a responsible grower in your garden.

  • @southerner66
    @southerner66 Před 4 lety +247

    I actually get kind of angry at the whole landscape design industry for bringing in all these invasive plants and planting them everywhere. A professional landscape architect planted wisteria in the yard where I live, even though we're on the edge of a woodland. I've spent years killing it, and new sprouts keep coming up.

    • @potatopotatoeOG
      @potatopotatoeOG Před 3 lety +11

      Oof. That's a no no..

    • @prachirawat6963
      @prachirawat6963 Před 3 lety +3

      Boiling water?

    • @makulewahine
      @makulewahine Před 3 lety +19

      I don't know what type of wisteria I planted many years ago, but I do know that after digging down about 5 feet to root it out it has reappeared years later in the middle of my rose bush. The more you chop them back the more vigorous they grow. They refuse to die!

    • @danwilkinson2797
      @danwilkinson2797 Před 3 lety +3

      Find something that competes with it that you can control perhaps.

    • @metaphoricdirigible1499
      @metaphoricdirigible1499 Před 3 lety +5

      Dan Wilkinson using forms of nature against other forms of nature. It’s what the environmentalists should be doing more.

  • @azraikezoe388
    @azraikezoe388 Před 5 lety +139

    It would be great if you could suggest plants that are "like" those invasive ones such as burning bush can be replaced by native blue berry shrubs, ect.

    • @lavvy2585
      @lavvy2585 Před 3 lety +5

      Didn't know they were invasive, the only reason I didn't get one is because my friend told me that one had actually caught on fire hence the burning bush, because it emits some kind of gas so I said I think I should leave that one alone.

    • @songmakerdragon2393
      @songmakerdragon2393 Před 3 lety +2

      Try checking your closest university extension. They should have lists and/or information sheets like that

    • @AT-rw3ou
      @AT-rw3ou Před 2 lety

      Depending on your local climate, fothergillas (gardenii or Mount Airy) are good alternatives to burning bush. They are also U.S. native.

  • @kimpulsipher647
    @kimpulsipher647 Před 5 lety +164

    I am such a bad gardener, I have killed 3 of these just trying to take care of them! My plants do best if I ignore them. Lol

    • @joepublic5469
      @joepublic5469 Před 3 lety +19

      You are just a loving person. You can love a plant to death. Most likely soggy roots. Watering touch will drown them. I have the same issue. 😊 we could make a living loving people's invasive plants to death. Lol

    • @bludelphinium994
      @bludelphinium994 Před 3 lety

      🤣

    • @hfyaer
      @hfyaer Před 3 lety

      Don't move them

    • @Folknfunk
      @Folknfunk Před 3 lety

      LoL

  • @2020Dumpsterfire
    @2020Dumpsterfire Před 4 lety +38

    Invasive depends highly on area youre in and what part of the world your in so specifying where its invasive is really helpful

  • @bleachchugtidy2178
    @bleachchugtidy2178 Před 3 lety +4

    Here in the uk there are so many buildings and walls destroyed by ivy, the roots easily burrow through wood and mortar and as the stem expands and turns to a thick trunk it separates the bricks and destroys the structure. My mum decided to plant ivy along a fence and a trelace on the house and within a few years we had to replace the door frame and remove the fence completely because it caused so much damage, I'm still cutting bits down 20 years later because it just doesn't die.

  • @jofipps376
    @jofipps376 Před 4 lety +14

    I have most of those listed in my tiny yard. But my worst daily nightmare is the “Morning Glory” vine.
    The bamboo is horrific also!

  • @Farseli
    @Farseli Před 5 lety +111

    I remove English Ivy from Seattle parks every single week. It grows fast and kills our urban forests. There's huge volunteer events to remove it, but we can never get it all.

    • @jinde75
      @jinde75 Před 3 lety +4

      Do you leave Ivy that grows on fences? Ivy that is over 10 years old blooms in autumn and lots of insects feed from it. At least that is how it is in.northern Germany. I do remove it from trees and garden beds. Yesterday I was tempted to remove a lot from a wild area in my garden, but there is a chance that hedgehogs are overwintering there. I know we have some toads overwintering on our property as well and I don't want to disturb the animals. I'll wait till March.

    • @bonsai_wolverine
      @bonsai_wolverine Před 3 lety +3

      @@jinde75 It might be native in Germany.

    • @noreenhallett7366
      @noreenhallett7366 Před 3 lety +4

      If you mix weed killer with paraffin and brush it on the leaves it will kill almost everything without damaging the ground

    • @XLightChanX
      @XLightChanX Před 3 lety +2

      @@jinde75 it's native in europe, gotta love my ivy mate!

    • @jinde75
      @jinde75 Před 3 lety +1

      @@XLightChanX I know it's native. I wrote how I can be beneficial. I just don't like it when it kills my trees and covers the whole garden.

  • @feliciafelicia6965
    @feliciafelicia6965 Před 4 lety +68

    I'm kinda glad I mistaken the periwinkle given to me for a houseplant 😂
    It's doing just fine in a small pot lol

    • @Rat_Sauce
      @Rat_Sauce Před 3 lety +1

      That's where it belongs
      If it's invasive

  • @susanmetz9892
    @susanmetz9892 Před 4 lety +6

    My neighbor planted bamboo a few years ago at our fence line and i can confirm that it grows very fast and the roots spread is a problem. We had a stalk come up through the floor of our shed. It is so strong that I have to use an axe to even choose it down. I also have honeysuckle on the opposite side of the yard. It grows naturally here and is almost impossible to keep up with. I spend one summer a few years ago pulling and burning it from inside me fence. That worked pretty well, but I still have to pull out the stray regrow periodically.

  • @bmac5085
    @bmac5085 Před 5 lety +93

    Japanese knotweed is banned here in the UK. It's roots have been known to go through concrete, and destroying building structures.
    A nightmare to get rid of, and very expensive.

    • @coffeebeann1
      @coffeebeann1 Před 4 lety

      Wow what beautifully strong roots

    • @winifredthompson2470
      @winifredthompson2470 Před 4 lety +7

      @@coffeebeann1 Not if you were living beside someone that had it growing in their back garden, and you couldn't sell your house because of it and it is very expensive to get rid of it. It is illegal to plant here in Northern Ireland, Greeting from Northern Ireland.

    • @bsarioz
      @bsarioz Před 4 lety +1

      Figs have pretty strong roots too. They can grow out of other trees, destroy buildings.

    • @thomasa5619
      @thomasa5619 Před 4 lety +1

      Berk Sarioz at least figs are susceptible to triclopyr
      I had a nonfruiting type in my tea tree. killed the bottom half with poison, but left the top half stuck in the branches of the other tree
      It just put roots into the other tree and I’ve had to cut it again twice now.

    • @KeepinYouUp07
      @KeepinYouUp07 Před 4 lety +3

      We have it all around my work. It will grow out of the smallest crack in asphalt or concrete. A small piece of root from 1 is all you need to spread it unknowingly. Crazy invasive plant.

  • @gbarbecue2399
    @gbarbecue2399 Před 5 lety +100

    English Ivy will also eventually suck the moisture out of brick work if grown up the side of a building. We had to get all the bricks repointed after the ivy was cut down. Looks nice, very 'olde worlde' but a bit of a nightmare for your property.

    • @gregoryeverson741
      @gregoryeverson741 Před 5 lety +4

      vines on brick, brick will be destroyed

    • @icarusalchemist1398
      @icarusalchemist1398 Před 4 lety +5

      Just get trailing ivy instead of ivy with suckers.

    • @annak804
      @annak804 Před 4 lety +4

      The water sucking properties of ivy are great for cob structures

    • @AC-qi9wo
      @AC-qi9wo Před 3 lety +3

      Oh my gosh, when we bought our house the previous owner, had English ivy, growing on the brick fireplace, I cut it off at the bottom and let it die, by the next spring I was taking it to the green clean getting rid of it for good.

    • @ID-ig6fq
      @ID-ig6fq Před 3 lety +3

      Heder Helix is nativ to loads of European countries. It’s one of the few native evergreens.
      Over here it’s a very good plant for birds and Insects but iron no one uses it anymore … It provides great nesting opportunities , pollen and berries extremely late in the year. It doesn’t need to climb up a house and can grow into great hedges also, but people plant utterly useless , non native thuja and cherry laurel hedges instead ..
      We’re struggling with a load of US „imports“ that are invasive over here and many of the same invasive Neophytes from Asia….

  • @laurelcook9078
    @laurelcook9078 Před 3 lety +24

    I almost bought English Ivy today to grow around my mailbox but then something in me made me think “this might be a bad idea...” I’m glad I thought that, my neighbors are always ripping Ivy off of the side of their house.

    • @athenamissinghome619
      @athenamissinghome619 Před 3 lety +4

      English ivy is not something to worry about- unless you leave it untended for 5 years..

    • @squishy2368
      @squishy2368 Před 3 lety +5

      Great for potting and hanging plants but not outdoors ! (:

    • @stephs1476
      @stephs1476 Před 3 lety +1

      It will be fine if you tend to it, ivy can be controlled and should be ok around a mail box just don’t put around a home, or anywhere large :)

    • @pattysciortino3313
      @pattysciortino3313 Před 3 lety +1

      You are correct to choose another plant. We have English IVY that was here long before we came. If I don't regularly cut it way back, it grows literally like a weed and is impossible to remove. It harbors rats. Hard pass. Find a nice native plant, one that will support the other wildlife in your area.

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire Před rokem +1

      ​@@athenamissinghome619 Just don't put it on your boundary, easy way to upset the neighbours

  • @PossumPityParty
    @PossumPityParty Před 3 lety +1

    Previous owner planted many of these. Been working on the honeysuckle for 7 years. It’s going well. Have to pull every spring.

  • @aprilmiller6767
    @aprilmiller6767 Před 3 lety +3

    Georgia here. If it's invasive, it's grown here. One of our worst is Sweet Gum tree. It grows both by seed and the roots sent out shoots. My back pasture is inundated. I'm also fighting Vinca Major and lemon mint that the previous owner put into a spot ALONG WITH English Ivy. It's a mess. I work at a nursery, and I try to gently let customers know when they're purchasing something that is going to take over. They're very grateful.

    • @joshward7009
      @joshward7009 Před 2 měsíci

      Where do you live that sweet gum is invasive? Out of all the native east coast US trees I wouldn't have guessed that would've become a problem overseas. I'd expect it to be tulip poplar or Boxelder lol

  • @tanisha.r.thomas
    @tanisha.r.thomas Před 5 lety +242

    Home Depot is great for selling plants not best in your particular zone....lol. they will sell anything you will buy whether it will grow in your region or not🤬

    • @jmarie1719
      @jmarie1719 Před 4 lety +20

      T. Thomas yes they will and it’s annoying.... You definitely have to do your research before purchasing their plants.

    • @wabbajackwabbajack6932
      @wabbajackwabbajack6932 Před 4 lety +22

      well yeah then they can sell you another one when it dies and you assume you did something wrong. lol

    • @Emiliapocalypse
      @Emiliapocalypse Před 4 lety +16

      They do that with succulents too! Saying you can grow them anywhere, especially your window sill, but many windows don’t get enough sunshine all day long to prevent your succulents from becoming stretched out.

    • @floridahiker1503
      @floridahiker1503 Před 4 lety +14

      @@Emiliapocalypse . I've seen spray painted succulents in pots that have no drainage holes. They had them under a watering system filled to the top with water. And then other succulents on shelves not getting enough light all stretched out. Somebody knocked over a one gallon aloe vera and it only had 2 inches of roots.

    • @whosedoingwhat
      @whosedoingwhat Před 4 lety +6

      Lowe’s how about fall planting plants in spring!

  • @lindaadams1008
    @lindaadams1008 Před 3 lety +1

    I remember buying some blue star creeper, and the day I set it in the ground, I took it right back out. I watched a CZcams video and there was a guy talking about how he couldn't get rid of it. Glad I looked that plant up...

  • @stonetoolcompany3649
    @stonetoolcompany3649 Před 3 lety +1

    I’m in year 2 of trying to eradicate 2 60+ year old clumps of oriental knot weed.... An incredibly invasive plant with an incredible root system. I’m mostly digging out the rhizomes wherever shoots pop up, but using glyphosate where I have to. The underground reservoir of stored energy is incredible, and the plant is amazingly resilient. This may take years!

  • @mikebussy3334
    @mikebussy3334 Před 5 lety +274

    My ex girlfriend only bought invasive plants she's been gone 10 years and I'm still trying to get rid of them.

    • @PM-qq9vu
      @PM-qq9vu Před 5 lety +89

      She didnt want you to forget her.

    • @sharksport01
      @sharksport01 Před 5 lety +58

      Same exact thing happened to me. So I'm gay now.

    • @mikebussy3334
      @mikebussy3334 Před 5 lety +30

      @@sharksport01 I'm not gay, but good for you.

    • @ellenmcintyre1247
      @ellenmcintyre1247 Před 5 lety +11

      Ah, the octopus tentacles of memory...

    • @luv_larain7637
      @luv_larain7637 Před 5 lety +26

      Mike worse than a tattoo lol

  • @rbear4574
    @rbear4574 Před 5 lety +5

    I have wild roses growing in my yard and will find little ones growing all over my yard, they reseed them self like crazy. Keep them under control and you can have a great looking wall of pink flowers from spring to fall.

  • @b.e.adventures2329
    @b.e.adventures2329 Před 4 lety +1

    We had vinca covering the side of the hill when we moved in. It was so thick there were mice and rats living in it . We ripped it out and sprayed it. Every spring it comes back after the winter rains. The more it rains the more we get...It's been 8 years.

  • @susankelley175
    @susankelley175 Před 3 lety +1

    The previous homeowner planted a good number of these. Endless issues. Thank you for the video!

  • @jthor3097
    @jthor3097 Před 5 lety +24

    I watched this in the nick of time. I just planted (in trays thank goodness) these same wisteria seeds that someone gave my husband. I think I’ll grow something different. 😃

    • @Sdravan
      @Sdravan Před 5 lety +7

      Jules Tor Wisteria does quite well in pots. Mine was on a deck, not a problem.

    • @jthor3097
      @jthor3097 Před 5 lety +2

      Susan Ravan
      Thank you. I do love the look of wisteria so I’ll grow mine in pots also. Thank you for the tip.

    • @jenniferdurham4749
      @jenniferdurham4749 Před 5 lety

      Jules Tor Try keeping it in a container. Over the years, you can train a nice gnarled trunk. Also you can control the seeds.

    • @shenesecatalfamo2118
      @shenesecatalfamo2118 Před 3 lety +2

      There is a native wisteria.I don’t know the genius name but I know it’s called American wisteria or Kentucky wisteria

  • @JP-hh3bz
    @JP-hh3bz Před 3 lety +14

    our state has a program where they trade you a Dogwood sapling for a picture of you with a cut down Callary Pear :)

  • @laura-gt3zc
    @laura-gt3zc Před 3 lety +1

    I had that autumn clematis and loved it. I will say I had to cut it back at least 3 times during the growing season, and back almost to the ground in late fall. But it was glorious and fragrant in bloom and covered an ugly post holding up the porch. For me the extra work was worth it.

  • @rayh7264
    @rayh7264 Před 3 lety +1

    Most definitely a useful video. Here in Brisbane Queensland I just spent several days physically removing the Singapore Daisy weed. Invaded from three properties away and it took over and I’d been trying for years to keep it under control to no avail. With the help of my son Nigel of Prehistoric Tank channel. Thanks for the video.

  • @Waiyuwong
    @Waiyuwong Před 5 lety +52

    Thank you for the info. Can you do a video for the opposite? Like what are some easy and good plant for the garden

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 5 lety +20

      Definitely will :)

    • @ellenmcintyre1247
      @ellenmcintyre1247 Před 5 lety +4

      Great idea! Of course, the thing is also, what is invasive in zone 6 isn't in zone 4, 5. Couldn't grow a decent wisteria here if you tried really hard. Englemann Ivy, honeysuckle (japonica), mint spp....yikes! Russian olive, and purple loosestrife used to be sold in Nurseries here. No longer. No one buys (merchants), the growers don't propagate...It's all education.

    • @dustinb1070
      @dustinb1070 Před 5 lety +3

      Google native plants for your area

    • @songmakerdragon2393
      @songmakerdragon2393 Před 3 lety

      @@ellenmcintyre1247 Also keep in mind how the the season where you live are changing. As an example, where I live (Atlantic City, NJ) spring and fall are about 5 minutes long nowadays. Not so when I was growing up.

  • @timrobinson6573
    @timrobinson6573 Před 3 lety +5

    How about some state laws that create a list of native plant species and when you plant them on your property you can write them off on your taxes. It would create a better ecosystem and would create growth in the nursery and landscaping businesses.

    • @janiceparnell8707
      @janiceparnell8707 Před 3 lety +1

      Oh my goodness I love this idea! I’m in Canada (east coast) but we have some of the same problems with plants on that list. An incentive is always a good idea to encourage people. Do you mind if I copy and post your idea on Facebook?

    • @Neenerella333
      @Neenerella333 Před 2 lety +1

      In Arizona, you get a one time rebate from Salt River Project ( the local power and water company) if you plant heat and drought tolerant plants in 75% of your yard and have a conserving drip system. It's not exactly the same, but encourages mindful growing. Most of these invasives are also water hogs, so if someone can get them to live inn the desert, that person is also using an extraordinary amount of water.

  • @kristend344
    @kristend344 Před rokem +2

    The plant that is the bane of my existence is big leaf maple. It's a native tree, but every year I'm pulling up seedlings. The mess of leaves in the fall, and the helicopters in the spring. It was a happy day when the neighbor cut down the massive clump (which was starting to rot, and dropped most of it's mess on my property) between our properties.

  • @joshrogers7816
    @joshrogers7816 Před 3 lety +3

    In the UK I planted a Lonicera Henryi in a far off part of our garden (we have a large garden) and forgot about it. 7 years later when we'd retired and got back into gardening I was appalled to find a 20' high, 40' long thicket that had throttled several mature trees and shrubs. Think of Sleeping Beauty and the mass of thorns that the Prince had to get through to release her and that was what faced us (but no thorns thank heavens) It took 3 days to cut it all down and untwist it from branches of the few trees that were just vabout hanging on. And 3 years later we're still doing extermination watches to deal with the suckers. Never felt the same about honeysuckle even though the perfume is delightful.

  • @caralama08
    @caralama08 Před 5 lety +210

    If you like and wish for an invasive species in your garden? PLEASE DONT BE A SELFISH NEIGHBOUR..... have the plant but PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE plant them in POTS so that they don’t take over and invade your innocent 😇 neighbours beautiful garden! THANK YOU 🙏. That is all... ❤️🦋🙏

    • @songmakerdragon2393
      @songmakerdragon2393 Před 3 lety +5

      With some of those invasives, that's not even good enough. Be very careful about what you buy to put in a pot.

    • @Mlv2123
      @Mlv2123 Před 3 lety +2

      I mean, as someone who lives in the middle of no where with no neighbor for achres, I think it will be okay in the ground. Not everyone can high five their neighbor from their window hahaha

    • @perisleaf
      @perisleaf Před 3 lety

      I have a burning passion for invasive plants and love making stories out of them. However I don’t wanna plant any anywhere near my garden anytime soon.

    • @cathymaynen324
      @cathymaynen324 Před 3 lety +1

      But the problem with them producing seeds is the seeds are carried by many vectors: wind, birds, squirrels, etc

  • @ApproximatelyCee
    @ApproximatelyCee Před 4 lety +5

    These types of videos are definitely what I look for. There are so many toxic plants growing here in New York State that came from far away. Now we’re struggling to get rid of them because they are so dangerous to humans and animals. Thanks so much for sharing.

    • @HinduBoy
      @HinduBoy Před 2 lety

      So dangerous! #cmonplanta #usehuman🐂💩

  • @crystal-jeanroat2885
    @crystal-jeanroat2885 Před 3 lety +2

    I’m battling garlic mustard at the moment... I got most of it out of the wooded part of my backyard, but my older neighbor leaves her wooded back to go wild. We just decided last night that I’m going to tear up her garlic mustard and I’m buying some native Golden Ragwort to battle it... I hope it works, as some gardeners online have said. I’m glad I saw this video today- just bought Vinca Minor two days ago and now I know not to plant it outside!

  • @Karen19820
    @Karen19820 Před 3 lety +1

    Please do more of this type of video educating us of things we need to know. Thank you for your diligence. 🦋

  • @SmitaMinz1987
    @SmitaMinz1987 Před 4 lety +30

    You should definitely make a video on "plants that should always be grown in pots" or "plants that are not for the careless gardener" 😂
    I have seen creeping figs gone berserk, and snake plants, rodeos, syngoniums, Gardenias... becoming a nuisance. While they can be easily controlled and maintained wonderfully, once established it's really irritating to dig out roots to eradicate them.

    • @doughoward6401
      @doughoward6401 Před 3 lety +1

      They are called creeping figs for a very good reason .

  • @spoton2826
    @spoton2826 Před 5 lety +21

    Sort of like Scotch Broom in the Pacific NW. Someone brought it her 50 years ago or so, now it's everywhere.

    • @janethagaman1998
      @janethagaman1998 Před 3 lety +2

      It's was a plant that was planted along freeways in WA state. Until people started to complain about it causing horrible hay fever. It cost thousands to remove.

  • @williamaitken7533
    @williamaitken7533 Před 3 lety

    Good list! We bought a house a couple of years ago and it turns out about half of this list is currently planted in our yard. Wonderful!
    I've got english ivy growing along my fence, nandina in my front yard, chinese privets in my back yard, three euonymus bushes in my garden area, and a barberry bush growing right next to those.
    At least for the privets I've started digging them up for bonsai. They were growing next to my fence and were messing it up so they had to go!

  • @peggyburress8837
    @peggyburress8837 Před 4 lety

    This was more information that I sorely need. You are right about nursery information. I have learned to do my own research because they will sell you anything. Plant and learn year by year. I have a few of these plants you showed in my yard. Please keep these posts going. We ‘learning by doing’ gardeners need you.

  • @donnawitteried3213
    @donnawitteried3213 Před 3 lety +3

    So good to know. My daughter and I are starting to fill in a new home where we live. I was considering one or two of these! Now I know to avoid!!! YES!!!! Keep these videos up! I am new to your channel and love it! 🌻🌼🌱🌿🌳💖

  • @Odette321
    @Odette321 Před 5 lety +7

    We have lantana in Australia that's invasive in some areas and not in other areas. It's good to get to know what's invasive where you are before planting things. Great video

    • @marthajf73
      @marthajf73 Před 5 lety

      I love lantana. I live in mid Atlantic east USA so it is an annual here

  • @mariawelling4194
    @mariawelling4194 Před 3 lety +1

    That you for advocating for these species and educating the public..Magnificent!

  • @jessiezhou3306
    @jessiezhou3306 Před 4 lety +31

    Maybe I should get baby panda for my bamboo garden LOL

    • @ttvphilswifft8682
      @ttvphilswifft8682 Před 3 lety +2

      Imagine the amount of money it would take to keep something that big properly fed. And also adult pandas are notorious for being opportunistic and violently territorial

    • @charlottesmom
      @charlottesmom Před 3 lety +3

      I want a baby panda! 🐼 (actually I just wanted to use that emoji! 😉)

  • @etmoiaussi439
    @etmoiaussi439 Před 3 lety +8

    We in Australia have a Biosecurity department which governs this sort of stuff, sometimes nationally, and some just state to state, as we have a wide range of growing conditions. What may end up being invasive in some states is a treasured garden item in others. We have a lot of plants we simply can not get for these reasons. Nurseries are not permitted to sell the plants on relevant lists for their areas.

    • @aussiegirl2148
      @aussiegirl2148 Před rokem

      Lantana is the worst.

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 Před 6 měsíci

      I wish we would do that in the US. It's legal to sell almost all invasives here and without any warning to the buyers.

  • @tohrurikku
    @tohrurikku Před 3 lety +3

    I remember I once bought this really pretty looking packet of seeds and was growing it. It was growing really well. Decided to look it up and all I could find was websites saying "Invasive, do not grow," I was in a pickle and decided to actually try to kill it on purpose instead of allowing it to go wild. Learned a lesson that day to always look up a plant before planting it. I have seen what can happen when invasive plants come to your area and I do not want to be the one to introduce another one.
    Lilly of the valley is really pretty, I have found memories of it as a child and I want to plant it, but I heard that it was an invasive plant so that is another one I will have to skip.

  • @LoveRatherThenHate
    @LoveRatherThenHate Před 4 lety +15

    My Grandmother had a princess tree on her property. Such a pretty tree with beautiful flowers and giant leaves, but I wasn't surprised to see it on this list haha! Every year we would have to pull up what seemed like a never ending supply of new trees. It definitely proved that it can grow anywhere, even in the rock hard Georgia red clay that barely grows anything.

  • @plantsoverpills1643
    @plantsoverpills1643 Před 4 lety +1

    Definitely an important and informative topic. So crucial to be aware of what you’re growing. Goutweed, coltsfoot and creeping Jenny are horribly invasive in my area. I’ll restrict creeping Jenny to containers where they create a great spiller but the other 2 are most unwelcome in my garden.

  • @antsquirly7654
    @antsquirly7654 Před 5 lety +8

    So true. Living in SW Fl and having had a landscaping company for 20+ years here, I've seen and dealt with too many invasive species. And homeowners who are down for the winters don't care. They want it like "up north."

    • @nancyhigdon879
      @nancyhigdon879 Před 3 lety +1

      My Sister lives in FL. Her neighbor had a nursery business, Every kind of plant is growing crazy all over the 3 acres! Big time jungle!!! Then her neighbor 3 houses down is raising those black and white iguanas! They get loose in "the jungle", Wonder if some of these invasive plants are poisonous for gopher tourtise?

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Před 5 lety +7

    Yellow Woodsorrel (oxalis stricta) you know the plant with clover like leaves and has tiny yellow flowers. It is native to some parts of the US but can take over even indoors.

  • @pand9293
    @pand9293 Před 2 lety +1

    Paulownia tomentosa with the large leaves is excellent in capturing the CO2 out of the atmosphere. It is a useful invasive plant. Ivy provides the bees with precious nectar in fall so they will have the stores full during winter. If the bees are happy then the plants are happy.

  • @jtferreira207
    @jtferreira207 Před 4 lety

    I loved this video, thank you for making it! Looking forward to more of these as well!

  • @gogo-word
    @gogo-word Před 5 lety +16

    I wish I could grow lush plants here but winters are so long and cold it won't happen. Zone 5a fierce winds and down to -40 not even counting in the wind chill. Maybe you mean in zone 7. The best plants are the natives here. It is very verdant and fertile with towering hardwoods and various evergreens
    Eagles soar overhead. I'm inside a forest!

  • @Kate98755
    @Kate98755 Před 4 lety +3

    My English ivy is in a container...my last house the owners planted it outside, I never could get rid of it

    • @madtabby66
      @madtabby66 Před 4 lety +1

      Roundup doesnt even kill it.

    • @Kate98755
      @Kate98755 Před 4 lety +2

      I have no doubt...I’m even nervous to have it in a container

  • @nvaranavage
    @nvaranavage Před 4 lety

    I was cleaning out my vegetable garden to get my new plants in and I came across a cute blue flower just growing on its own. Didn't buy it, didn't plant it myself. Thought about letting it grow and I'm glad it didn't because it was in this list!!!!! So it just goes to show how when others around my home grow these plants that they spread due to native animals far away from where they were originally planted.

  • @cheesekake1841
    @cheesekake1841 Před 3 lety

    Very glad to find this video by accident. I do have a few Nandinas given by a friend, planted a few months ago. Recently I read about it and realized they can spread wildly. Now you confirm I should just dig them out, maybe put them in containers. Thanks.

  • @evac124
    @evac124 Před 4 lety +6

    The previous owners of my house planted bamboo on one side of the lawn and now it’s a nightmare to keep up with the new shoots coming up everywhere... I don’t know how to get rid of it without digging up the whole lawn!

  • @fn1202
    @fn1202 Před 5 lety +50

    This may sound strange but strawberries can be very invasive once they start putting out suckers, the roots are so tough and go so deep that if you allow it to it will take over your whole growing space/medium, even the stems that connect the suckers are hard to break.

    • @ZsaZsaUmbra
      @ZsaZsaUmbra Před 5 lety +17

      Native plants by definition are not invasive. One can't invade their native habitat.

    • @jeanneclark99
      @jeanneclark99 Před 4 lety +16

      Technically, your strawberries are aggressive. A plant can be aggressive without being invasive. Invasive actually is detrimental to the environment. A lot of people confuse the two terms.

    • @alfredhitchcock1041
      @alfredhitchcock1041 Před 4 lety +6

      Are you sure they are strawberries & not mock strawberries? Mock strawberries grow all over my yard. It is a vine that puts out what look like little strawberries, but they are tasteless. Mock strawberry has yellow flowers. Real strawberry has white flowers.

    • @Livetoeat171
      @Livetoeat171 Před 3 lety +1

      Round up will kill anything just get it on the leaves and nothing around it that you don’t wanna kill

    • @naturdoc4076
      @naturdoc4076 Před 3 lety +3

      That’s why I use strawberry as a ground cover. It keeps the weeds down but does not climb on the shrubs

  • @MrVeeBlog
    @MrVeeBlog Před 3 lety +1

    I had that Love Grass in my yard. I put it in 4 years ago. I tried to remove it in the second year as much as I could because it was growing in places I did not plant it. To this day, it still grows in my backyard. To this day I can find myself pulling it out of the ground by its roots.

  • @haldavis1424
    @haldavis1424 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for posting this information. More awareness is badly needed to stop sale a propogation of invasives!

  • @kathysoccermom3751
    @kathysoccermom3751 Před 5 lety +10

    Interesting article
    Wish I had seen it 15 years ago before I planted wisteria

  • @jackyechan
    @jackyechan Před 4 lety +37

    I used to live in an apartment with a small yard and concrete slab. I remember painters hacked down all of the bamboo to paint the building and everyday during my lunch break I measured those bamboo plants and yes they do grow up to a foot a day! The bamboo also spread out underneath the concrete slab to the other side of my tiny yard.
    You should also do a post of grass and how majority of them also come from China and are technically weeds, like St. Augustine Grass which is very popular here in North Texas. I hate that grass and how the runners can invade a flower bed and are almost impossible to keep out. I think it was some painting of a meadow area in Europe that made the grass lawn so popular. Why else would anyone grow something that you have to water like crazy just to cut down to look pretty? ASININE!

    • @prachirawat6963
      @prachirawat6963 Před 3 lety +9

      Agree. I see people putting so much effort like they doing serious farming only to out grass seeds. You could grow so much healthy organic food with all those fertilizer, mowing and hardwork

    • @cariwaldick4898
      @cariwaldick4898 Před 3 lety +4

      I wish my HOA would allow us to replace the lawn with a native ground cover. In the backyard where they can't see, I'm courting several "weeds" that are gorgeous, and don't require any special attention.

    • @jackyechan
      @jackyechan Před 3 lety +4

      @@cariwaldick4898 the HOA is why democracy isn’t a good thing for everyone. Majority rules is usually bereft of the big picture as it pertains to the laws of nature. Most grass is a weed, usually from China. St Augustine is a prime example.

    • @cariwaldick4898
      @cariwaldick4898 Před 3 lety +5

      @@jackyechan I could deal with it if it was really a democracy. It's not. They come with rules and restrictions we NEVER got to vote on. It would be great if the city would back up the homeowner against harmful restrictions--but they don't. It's one of my hot-buttons, so I'll quit now.

    • @songmakerdragon2393
      @songmakerdragon2393 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jackyechan Most grass that the general public plants is a weed. You just have to learn about, then get, something native to plant.

  • @agentaemme
    @agentaemme Před 3 lety +2

    My house came with several of these. The nandinas we've kept under control due to their locations. I removed over 55 lawn bags of English Ivy the second summer we lived there. The privets are the last thing to handle. It doesn't help that I am allergic to them and cannot breathe by them if they go into bloom.

  • @jlevan1996
    @jlevan1996 Před 2 lety

    I've got two of these in my landscape and wisteria on my neighbor's property. The wisteria sends out ground shoots and climbs trees to roof level. Insidious plant!

  • @fortheearth
    @fortheearth Před 5 lety +5

    Very informative. Thank you.

  • @muffininorbit
    @muffininorbit Před 3 lety +3

    Also relevant about wisteria: it will rip the roof off your house.

    • @charlottesnyder8694
      @charlottesnyder8694 Před 3 lety

      Wisteria actually did rip the electric lines off my mother's house.

  • @kylief3774
    @kylief3774 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for all the information. I will keep this in mind just brought a house with 3 Acres.

  • @eileenh7597
    @eileenh7597 Před 3 lety +2

    Great topic-Please think twice! Also please add Trumpet vine to the top of this list. As a novice, I bought one from a nursery for growing on a trellis under my kitchen window in MA. Once established, it rapidly grew and didn’t like being confined to the trellis. It damaged any cedar shingle it grew over (and under) and began to corroded my foundation 😳 so I dug it up and tossed it in my compost pile (because when I have a problem, I prefer to double it). The next year I learned that it can sprout up from any tiny bit of root missed so I was hacking up my garden beds and lawn for years trying to get it all. At year 5, I realized it had also grown out the back of my compost, under the grass and began to choke my beautiful magnolia, beloved peonies and several other flowers and evergreens. I’m an organic gardener but in one of my darkest moments I tried micro amounts of carefully applied herbicide. Apparently this angered the plant Gods because it ate it up like fertilizer and came back stronger than ever. I built alters, vowed to nurture every green thing, volunteered to assist any gardener and toiled ceaselessly to pay down my karmic debt but still my prayers of mercy went unanswered. Finally, after 15 years of blood, sweat and tears, I had to sell my house. If it pops up in my new yard, I’m contacting Stephen King.

    • @aquariusrising3683
      @aquariusrising3683 Před 3 lety

      Appreciate your sense of humor, lol. While I type this, I am looking out the window at my lush, healthy, yellow hummingbird vine. :)

    • @noreaster4194
      @noreaster4194 Před 3 lety +1

      Trumpet vine is technically a native species in America. But yeah it's extremely destructive to structures and property. I have one on my wooden fence the neighbor planted years ago and has completely engulfed and ruined the fence but at least gives us privacy :)

  • @katiekane5247
    @katiekane5247 Před 5 lety +94

    Sadly, most of these invasive plants have a well behaved native species that would be a very good alternative. Why import plants instead of identifying the natives & allowing THEM to flourish? Most folks spend more time picking out a fridge than their plants, unleashing havoc on not only their yard but neighboring yards as well. Nurseries are bad about selling whatever will sell, the Hell with the environment, NOT a gr8 business model. Many sources are availible to identify natives, use them! One you missed is Kudzu, scourge of the South.

    • @saturnynetitan
      @saturnynetitan Před 5 lety +3

      Ugh Kudzu! The bane of my garden.

    • @diannenaworensky6698
      @diannenaworensky6698 Před 5 lety +2

      Katie Kane, you definitely got that right!! ✌🏻❤

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Před 5 lety

      @@diannenaworensky6698 ty sister!

    • @katiekane5247
      @katiekane5247 Před 5 lety +2

      @@saturnynetitan stuff is such a bugger to get rid of, and to think it was ALL originally planted & even recommended by Extension Agents. Smh

    • @QueenBee-gx4rp
      @QueenBee-gx4rp Před 5 lety +4

      Never plant anything that says creeper!

  • @ThePlantUtopia
    @ThePlantUtopia Před 5 lety +60

    I built a raised bed and grow bamboo in it and it is beautiful. I keep an eye on it so it doesn’t spread. When the wind blows it makes this beautiful sound.

    • @AnimeShinigami13
      @AnimeShinigami13 Před 5 lety +13

      do you use it for crafts? might help keep its population in check. Bamboo is really strong and you could easily make your own garden stakes for tomatoes, beans, ect with them. It used to be believed that paleolithic humans didn't go into asia during the stone age. But one theory is that the bamboo was so good for spears they just stopped making flint spearheads and arrowheads and made their weapons from bamboo, which biodegrades, leaving no evidence. :D its a lovely and very useful plant, but it has to be looked after!

    • @ThePlantUtopia
      @ThePlantUtopia Před 5 lety +9

      AnimeShinigami13 yes, I plan to use it for trellis stakes for my plants. One of the types of bamboo I grow is black bamboo so it will make beautiful trellis stakes. I read somewhere that bamboo is very good for the environment because it absorbs greenhouse gases and releases more oxygen than trees.

    • @bluebird9193
      @bluebird9193 Před 5 lety +9

      He’s referring to Running Bamboo , there is a less invasive alternative called Clumping Bamboo.

    • @ThePlantUtopia
      @ThePlantUtopia Před 5 lety +3

      Crouton I have both types of bamboo. Clumping also spreads. I have 1 clumping bamboo that is getting close to the neighbors yard that I will need to move and divide.

    • @kayfrick7129
      @kayfrick7129 Před 5 lety +2

      I was thinking about growing bamboo for homestead projects but now I know that I need to do a lot of research first and see if it can be kept under control. I already have a few of the vines in this video that previous owners let loose.

  • @gkseeton
    @gkseeton Před 3 lety

    There are so many native species that are beautiful. I find when I go looking for them I can find native species that meet my goals, and help native pollinators too.

  • @salemdrones4907
    @salemdrones4907 Před 4 lety +1

    This video is super helpful in identifying invasive species. I think I'll start reading your blogs now. 🙂

  • @cindywannamaker5299
    @cindywannamaker5299 Před 3 lety +15

    My aunt had bamboo in her yard in California that someone else planted. She said you could literally hear it grow at night!

  • @tenderheart7530
    @tenderheart7530 Před 5 lety +14

    @fern river
    Thank you for bringing up the scotch broom. No matter how hard we try to eradicate it people are still planting it. It is destroying swaths of forest. I think it should be a crime to have it in people’s property. I think the seeds last 40+ years on the ground.

    • @janethagaman1998
      @janethagaman1998 Před 3 lety +3

      It's was also a plant that was planted along freeways in WA state. Until people started to complain about it causing horrible hay fever. It cost thousands to remove.

  • @rachellel
    @rachellel Před 4 lety +1

    I think this is a helpful video for those without freezing temps to kill and slow plants down.

  • @lindaelswick1255
    @lindaelswick1255 Před 3 lety +1

    I used to live in Charleston, SC and wisteria is everywhere. It grows and covers as much as kudzu.

  • @court2379
    @court2379 Před 5 lety +12

    I have a good number of these plants, and none give me issues in Utah. The ones that give me trouble are Virginia Creeper, Chinese Elm, and Bind Weed.

    • @jaffie
      @jaffie Před 4 lety +4

      I am currently fighting Virginia Creeper. I have no idea how it got in my yard. Stupid me thought it looked so ornamental when it grew out of a window well & up the side of the house to the roof. I knew I had a problem when it entered the lawn. I had it all torn out, but now it has appeared on the other side of the yard! My backyard neighbor so "thoughtfully" planted an aspen tree. I am always cutting down those suckers.

  • @kylelow5791
    @kylelow5791 Před 4 lety +3

    When I was younger I always carried around these two huge wooden planters in the back of my van for strawberries when I went camping and everywhere I was told to stay off state land

  • @susanmetz9892
    @susanmetz9892 Před rokem +2

    Bamboo is no joke. My neighbor planted it along the fence line for privacy. He got his privacy and I got the rhizomes 25 feet in front of my shed. I dig those rhizomes out about 2 x week. He got the rhizomes into his septic tank.

  • @paulmifsud5753
    @paulmifsud5753 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey, I thought this was a great help! Thank you for the advice. I fully expected to hear the name of one of my seedlings, I'm glad to say in the clear

  • @michaelrief4424
    @michaelrief4424 Před 3 lety +6

    I planted English Ivy as a ground cover several years ago. Like this video details it also likes to climb. It looked pretty nice climbing the trees but last year I noticed a few of the trees were dropping leafs in the middle of the summer. The Ivy was literally sucking the life out of my trees. It cost me $8000 to strip the Ivy and Asian honeysuckle out of my yard. Buyers beware.

    • @yokikokudou
      @yokikokudou Před 2 lety

      that's because English Ivy is supposed to be planted INDOOR so they won't get invasive!!! 😂🤪😆😜🤣

    • @michaelrief4424
      @michaelrief4424 Před 2 lety

      @@yokikokudou
      Maybe it was Baltic Ivy, whatever, but I learned that it just won’t stay on the ground.

  • @jessicainhofe703
    @jessicainhofe703 Před 5 lety +53

    My first lesson on invasive species sold in nurseries was with morning glory.
    Boy did I learn the hard way! lol

    • @cathyvincent3510
      @cathyvincent3510 Před 5 lety +8

      I had a neighbor who planted it on the chain link fence between our houses. He would yell at me for cutting it on my side. It grew over 4 feet a week during the growing season. I know someone else that it took over their yard and the dry riverbed they had. They have been working on removing it from their yard for years. Finally they have the upper hand. I have seen it kill trees.

    • @jessicainhofe703
      @jessicainhofe703 Před 5 lety +3

      @@cathyvincent3510
      Yes ma'am, I had neighbor who moved in next door who wanted to continue to grow them in between us and I just told her that I had made a mistake and ' here enjoy theses sugar peas and Japanese winged beans, instead'. lol

    • @dewality8768
      @dewality8768 Před 4 lety +5

      Oh shit. I’m in Scotland and I’ve just planted a bunch of morning glory seeds along my fence. I want it to grow biggg to keep the nosey, unsanitary neighbours from peering over. Kinda regretting it now lol

    • @StrangeDisposition
      @StrangeDisposition Před 4 lety +5

      Depends on where you live and what kind of morning glory. The annual one sold in seeds is not invasive where I live but the perennial one sold as a plant is a house eater!

    • @jessicainhofe703
      @jessicainhofe703 Před 4 lety +2

      @@dewality8768
      lol Nooo they are still a beautiful flower. I imagine it will look magnificent!

  • @pascalbrunet19
    @pascalbrunet19 Před 3 lety

    Useful and well documented. Not only for the plants, but for the way of thinking of the possible results of our passion for nice plants !

  • @mattdixon6396
    @mattdixon6396 Před rokem

    I work in Bushland Regeneration in Australia which involves mostly weed eradication and natural re introducing native species. Every time I go to a nursery the urge to spray Glyphosate mix is high.
    Thanks for doing this it is a bigger help than you realise
    Great job👍

  • @NatureShy
    @NatureShy Před 5 lety +13

    There is native spireas, too, that look just like the Japanese Spirea. Subalpine Spirea, or Alpine Spirea, is native to the Pacific Northwest, looks just like Japanese Spirea, and is also found in garden centers. The other spirea is Douglas's Spirea, or Hardhack. Looks quite different, and can be aggressive. Loves wet soil, and is also native to wetlands in the PNW.

    • @epicgardening
      @epicgardening  Před 5 lety +1

      Amazing tip, thanks

    • @carolynwarfield1057
      @carolynwarfield1057 Před 3 lety +4

      That's a problem in general with this video. It's important to call out variety so that folks understand that not every member of the species us invasive.

    • @HinduBoy
      @HinduBoy Před 2 lety

      @@carolynwarfield1057 they kinda like a boardstroke info / media provider #missedme #clickbait

  • @dawnruhl8405
    @dawnruhl8405 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you for the information. The neighbors have the honeysuckle that has doubled in size in almost 2 years. It does smell fantastic, tho. Now how do I keep it in their yard is the question that comes to mind.

  • @SageWolfStudio
    @SageWolfStudio Před 3 lety +2

    Ah I know this was from 2017 but thank you so much, I was looking at the bamboo and fire bush for my garden but now ill look into something more native for it. I'll maybe keep bamboo as an indoor plant instead, im still working out the details since we just moved into our home. So far I do have pollinator flowers and veggies growing but... the lot is bare lol. Thank you for all your awesome videos, I am learning a lot.

  • @bettye444
    @bettye444 Před 3 lety

    I have just planted a vinca minor in a shade area, knowing it does spread. I want ground coverage in this spot and will watch closely to keep it from going outside the bounds. Great video. Thanks for the info.