First Bindweed of Spring!
First Bindweed of Spring!
Still haven't seen my first swallow of spring, but was down the allotment at the weekend and certainly saw my first bindweed of the year. Gave me a sense of sinking dread, and a definite feeling of 'here we go again'!
"If you want to catch a loon, you have to think like a loon"
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Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
Oh me too!! Also ground elder! pbf.
- Mrs Moustoir
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Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
Bindweed here too. It has invaded the asparagus patch and is impossible to weed out from there.
I hate the stuff!
I hate the stuff!

- Thomzo
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Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
Yup, saw the first shoots of bindweed yesterday and there is definitely ground elder in the middle bed. I am trying to persuade the chooks that both are really really tasty.
Ground elder is edible, I gather, but I've not tried it yet.
Zoe
Ground elder is edible, I gather, but I've not tried it yet.
Zoe
Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
I pulled up loads of the evil stuff yesterday - it's like trying to hold back the tide, isn't it? 


Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
We're digging over a long neglected allotment at the moment and last night we had a very satisfying bonfire composed largely of a mountain of bindweed root. Very smokey, but grimly pleasurable nonetheless.
Bindweed must die! (as must couch grass)
Bindweed must die! (as must couch grass)
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Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
I read somewhere that the Romans introduced ground elder to this country as a food, they have a lot to answer for! pbf.
Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
Didn't they also bring rabbits?
The bindweed here isn't quite through yet, but the ground elder is - I must say, the more of the garden I cultivate the easier it seems to be to control, but still a nightmare around the rhubarb.
I am digging out clumps of couch grass every day
The bindweed here isn't quite through yet, but the ground elder is - I must say, the more of the garden I cultivate the easier it seems to be to control, but still a nightmare around the rhubarb.
I am digging out clumps of couch grass every day

Ann Pan
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some days you're the lamp-post"
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"Some days you're the dog,
some days you're the lamp-post"
My blog
My Tea Cosy Shop
Some photos
My eBay
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Re: First Bindweed of Spring!
The Romans did bring many things across, but the Ground Elder we all know & hate was brought by the second 'Roman' invasion...Christianity. The monks cultivated it in the physic garden as a tincture of it is said to cure gout.
BTW the Normans brought the rabbits & they were delicate little things that were killed by our harsh Winter...so they selectivley bred 'em!
Meanwhile, back on thread, hubby has spent the last two weekends de-bindweeding our garden, but as its 30 ft wide & we have a wasteland on one side & a bloke that likes the stuff on the other we're probably fighting a loosing battle!
MW
BTW the Normans brought the rabbits & they were delicate little things that were killed by our harsh Winter...so they selectivley bred 'em!
Meanwhile, back on thread, hubby has spent the last two weekends de-bindweeding our garden, but as its 30 ft wide & we have a wasteland on one side & a bloke that likes the stuff on the other we're probably fighting a loosing battle!
MW
If it isn't a Greyhound, it's just a dog!