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-   -   Glyphosate and neigbours revisited (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/616271-glyphosate-neigbours-revisited.html)

Scott[_17_] August 4th 18 03:06 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

ARW August 4th 18 03:25 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).



Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.



--
Adam

Scott[_17_] August 4th 18 03:27 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.

ARW August 4th 18 03:34 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam

The Natural Philosopher[_2_] August 4th 18 05:14 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On 04/08/18 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.

Glyphosate is not absorbed by the roots


--
Theres a mighty big difference between good, sound reasons and reasons
that sound good.

Burton Hillis (William Vaughn, American columnist)

Andrew Gabriel August 4th 18 08:20 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
In article ,
Scott writes:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.


It needs the plant to be growing so there's a good circulation of
sap. I applied some in the dry weather, and hasn't worked anywhere
near as effectively as it would if there was enough water around
for the plants to be actually growing. It might still operate if
we get rain. It doesn't work by watering in to the soil - soil
deactivates it. It needs to be absorbed by the plant above ground,
and carried to the roots in the sap. Most preparations have
detergents in them so it is absorbed through the leaves.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

Scott[_17_] August 5th 18 09:50 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 17:14:46 +0100, The Natural Philosopher
wrote:

On 04/08/18 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.

Glyphosate is not absorbed by the roots


Thanks. I should probably have said 'transported through the plant'.
My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
is transported through the plant. May be wrong of course.

Scott[_17_] August 6th 18 09:06 AM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Sun, 05 Aug 2018 22:31:14 +0100, Tim Streater
wrote:

In article , Scott
wrote:

On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 17:14:46 +0100, The Natural Philosopher
wrote:

On 04/08/18 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.

My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.

Glyphosate is not absorbed by the roots


Thanks. I should probably have said 'transported through the plant'.
My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
is transported through the plant. May be wrong of course.


It'll be absorbed through the leaves initially. Most plants absorb some
moisture through the leaves too I expect, so possible a bit of water on
teh leaves once the stuff has gone in, may help.


Thanks. That's clearer.

whisky-dave[_2_] August 6th 18 12:00 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Saturday, 4 August 2018 15:34:30 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.


My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam


I was told you needed to cut the bark off a tree anout 5 inches or so all aroundas most of the nutrients flow through the bark to the leaves removing the bark kills the tree but only slowly. That way you don't need chemicals.


Scott[_17_] August 6th 18 12:04 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Mon, 6 Aug 2018 04:00:18 -0700 (PDT), whisky-dave
wrote:

On Saturday, 4 August 2018 15:34:30 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.

My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam


I was told you needed to cut the bark off a tree anout 5 inches or so all aroundas most of the nutrients flow through the bark to the leaves removing the bark kills the tree but only slowly. That way you don't need chemicals.


Or use dynamite as Clarkson once did on Comic Relief.

FMurtz August 6th 18 03:37 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
whisky-dave wrote:
On Saturday, 4 August 2018 15:34:30 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.

My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam


I was told you needed to cut the bark off a tree anout 5 inches or so all aroundas most of the nutrients flow through the bark to the leaves removing the bark kills the tree but only slowly. That way you don't need chemicals.

But very obvious.


whisky-dave[_2_] August 6th 18 04:38 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On Monday, 6 August 2018 15:38:08 UTC+1, FMurtz wrote:
whisky-dave wrote:
On Saturday, 4 August 2018 15:34:30 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.

My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam


I was told you needed to cut the bark off a tree anout 5 inches or so all aroundas most of the nutrients flow through the bark to the leaves removing the bark kills the tree but only slowly. That way you don't need chemicals.

But very obvious.


Ah I didn't know the aim was to murder it. :)

ARW August 6th 18 06:22 PM

Glyphosate and neigbours revisited
 
On 06/08/2018 16:38, whisky-dave wrote:
On Monday, 6 August 2018 15:38:08 UTC+1, FMurtz wrote:
whisky-dave wrote:
On Saturday, 4 August 2018 15:34:30 UTC+1, ARW wrote:
On 04/08/2018 15:27, Scott wrote:
On Sat, 4 Aug 2018 15:25:22 +0100, ARW
wrote:

On 04/08/2018 15:06, Scott wrote:
The glyphosate saga ended well. One of the neighbours asked what I
had done in the garden. I said I had just put down some basic
weedkiller to make a start on tackling the weeds. Another neighbour
said she did not know that had happened to the vegetation in the
garden - it must have been the drought (not noticing that all other
gardens were unaffected).

Thanks for the reminder.

Just had a have a look at the tree that I gave a good dosing of
glyphosate about 8 weeks ago.

All the leaves are drooping and it does not look happy.

My sister-in-law says it needs some rain or watering in to ensure it
gets absorbed by the roots. May be wrong of course.



It got a 20mm hole drilled into the trunk and the glyphosphate poured
into the hole. The rain seems to have done its job.

--
Adam

I was told you needed to cut the bark off a tree anout 5 inches or so all aroundas most of the nutrients flow through the bark to the leaves removing the bark kills the tree but only slowly. That way you don't need chemicals.

But very obvious.


Ah I didn't know the aim was to murder it. :)

Indeed. The ****ers that own it have not given me permission to kill it.

--
Adam


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