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In reply to the discussion: A Tree That Was Once the Suburban Ideal Has Morphed Into an Unstoppable Villain [View all]KS Toronado
(23,727 posts)68. I got rid of a bunch of Honeysuckle once
Cut it off close to the ground, used a flat wood spade drill bit in a cordless drill to drill a hole in what's left of
the root. Hardware store had product called "root rot" might be different name today, poured the powder in
drilled hole and watered it. In about 6 months the wood just crumbles. If at all possible stay away from
using Roundup, too many health problems associated with it.
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A Tree That Was Once the Suburban Ideal Has Morphed Into an Unstoppable Villain [View all]
Demovictory9
Nov 2021
OP
Sorry not true...species like the pear tree do help with the environment just as well as a native
Demsrule86
Nov 2021
#49
Your are off base. Non native invasive plants really hurt our biodiversity, the supportive capacity
Botany
Nov 2021
#8
This reminds me of the guy who used to live across the street from me who removed all the pine trees
GoCubsGo
Nov 2021
#55
All Callery Pears are bad. Bradfords were sold as sterile but they produce viable seed when ...
Botany
Nov 2021
#13
Nursery/Garden Center I worked at sold Edelweiss, Mt. Laurel, some types of azaleas, and sourwood ..
Botany
Nov 2021
#69
I did landscape labor in the 1980's when I was in college. We planted a lot of these.
Gore1FL
Nov 2021
#31
We don't have an invasive tree problem here, but we do have an invasive plant.
BobTheSubgenius
Nov 2021
#33