The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Smallholding => Land Management => Topic started by: sandspider on July 12, 2020, 04:11:15 pm
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Hi all
Can anyone recommend a good Japanese knotweed removal company in South wales? Would like an idea of likely price to remove a couple of small patches, but they're alongside a stream so I'm not qualified / willing to do it myself...
Thanks.
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Do you actually mean remove (i.e. physically dig up and remove) or do you mean kill by chemical means [member=145259]sandspider[/member] ?
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Probably just kill, actually. I guess removing all the soil etc. would be a significant undertaking.
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[member=145259]sandspider[/member]
UK wide comapany - found by googling
http://www.ecocontrol.co.uk/ (http://www.ecocontrol.co.uk/) but this one is in South Wales - found same way - https://www.taylor-weed-control.co.uk/ (https://www.taylor-weed-control.co.uk/)
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Thanks Dojango, but I was hoping for personal recommendations over Google results... I'm in touch with one company I found, will check out Taylor's too.
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Where abouts are you? For example, in Saansea the local authority do it at cost price. Essentially they see it as preventative to protect the surrounding areas. The prices were very competitive
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If you can get your hands on Gypsoate you can spray it and keep spraying any new growth and it should kill it - but may take a couple of years.
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Thanks all.
I'm near Chepstow, and there doesn't seem to be any LA help that I can find.
The patch is next to a stream, so spraying isn't an option. Being next to a stream also means treatment isn't guaranteed, as more knotweed can and will wash down when the stream floods.
Perhaps I'll keep cutting and burning, and try a bit of stem injection towards the end of the season when the fluids are being drawn back down to the roots.
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I took this from an American page, so you would need to check with the Enviroment agency to see if it was legal in the UK
Glyphosate
Glyphosate is a herbicide that can be used in water and is used to kill aquatic plants such as water lilies and plants close to the shoreline like purple loosestrife. However, the herbicide must only be sprayed directly on the plant's leaves, according to the State of Washington Department of Ecology.