I haven't yet taken notice of the prevalence of yellow nut-sedge in
South Carolina. Since it's a warm weather plant it's only recently been
popping up in my New York lawn. It tends to be brought in from the
farmer's fields in straw used to cover newly seeded grass. That's how I
got it and I've been fighting it for 7 years now. I've almost conquered
it. I assume there's no conquering it in South Carolina?
Chuck Norcutt
On 7/14/2014 9:29 AM, Charles Geilfuss wrote:
You have nice volunteers, Jim. Around here most of my volunteers are
Nut-sedge and Virginia Creeper.
Charlie
On Sat, Jul 12, 2014 at 8:09 PM, Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
While wandering around the back yard today, I found a volunteer gladiola
bent over in the grass. We have not had glads in years, but were forced to
remove some holly trees that threatened utility lines, and this one showed
up in the newly exposed area.
http://www.gallery.leica-users.org/v/OldNick/Gladiola+1082-1.jpg.html
Made with the X-E1 and 18-55, and processed from a jpeg image in Picture
Window Pro 7.0
Comments and critiques welcomed.
--
Jim Nichols
Tullahoma, TN USA
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