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Index of Subjects I don't know the peculiarities of this invasive and hope I don't find out. In any case, keep sharing those words of wisdom, David! -----Original Message----- From: naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca [mailto:naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca] On Behalf Of David & Alison Webster Sent: June-09-14 9:55 AM To: NatureNS@chebucto.ns.ca Subject: [NatureNS] Glossy Buckthorn Dear All, June 9, 2014 I see some glysophate salesman has struck the mother lode. Using it to control Glossy Buckthorn on 1,100 acres by pulling out seedlings and painting glysophate on cut stumps of larger growth. At 1/2 acre per Sunday it will take 2200 Sundays or 42 years. Meanwhile birds in fruit season can sow 1,100 acres by noon. And if the soil has been disturbed by pulling up seedlings then the take should be very good. http://thechronicleherald.ca/novascotia/1213245-glossy-buckthorn-feels-the-w rath-of-volunteers-in-pugwash-estuary And all this enthusiastic trampling will no doubt inflict damage on the native plants that they intend to protect. When one of these are cut they have to be hung upside down to prevent the cut ends from rooting; according to this article. They must be dealing with a very different strain of Glossy Buckthorn than the one I know. A road that I cut through some dense Buckthorn thickets, just after fruit maturity when they are most vulnerable, in 2002 has not regrown. If left alone they will eventually flop over and perish. Yours truly, Dave Webster, Kentville
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