scorched earth gardening

After my last post I did more research on con­trol­ling Eng­lish ivy. Beyond the commonly-quoted advice to spray with her­bi­cides, or to attempt the mechan­i­cal removal that is occu­py­ing me these days, I saw an inter­est­ing idea for a new but as-yet-untested bio­log­i­cal con­trol Noth­ing imme­di­ately use­ful, unfor­tu­nately. And then I started to see tech­niques that could only be dreamed up by peo­ple like me who’ve been spend­ing too much time fight­ing off Hed­era helix.

From the folks at the Uni­ver­sity of Cal­i­for­nia, in a dis­cus­sion of ivy, comes:

Pre­scribed burn­ing: An extreme method that has been used with some suc­cess is to burn ivy plants and resprouts with a blow torch at reg­u­lar inter­vals; the energy used by the plant to regrow will even­tu­ally be depleted. Obvi­ously, this approach requires con­sid­er­able caution.

And from Organic Land Care.com comes:

Another more dras­tic method has been to use a blow-torch to repeat­edly blast the plant with a hot flame. By repeat­edly expos­ing the plant to high heat, this method is intended to exhaust the H. helix of its energy so that it is unable to mul­ti­ply or pro­duce berries for repro­duc­tion (Reichard, 2000).

So…fatigued of doing things the old-fashioned way, I went to the garage and got the blow­torch. After aim­ing the flame at some ivy leaves they began to writhe and smoke in a most sat­is­fy­ing way. Soon the leaves started to burn, which sur­prised me since ivy is one of the plants that shows up occa­sion­ally as a rec­om­mended plant for firescap­ing. As the leaves burned, some of the dead grasses around them started to catch fire. Just a lit­tle more heat and I’d have had a lit­tle brush­fire started. Hmmmm. Maybe it’s not such a good idea, I started to think, look­ing up at a wood fence not more than two feet away. Damn, it felt good, but I ended the exper­i­ment right then and there–it prob­a­bly wasn’t a good idea to burn down the neighborhood!
ivyburn.jpg

March 07 2008 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 1 Comment »