Pond frog
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- Messages
- 529
- Location
- Warwickshire uk
Life might be short for you but what about Greta’s generation who will live with the consequencesIgnore Greta, and use glyphosate.
Life's too short to indulge silly tricks played by maniacs.
Life might be short for you but what about Greta’s generation who will live with the consequencesIgnore Greta, and use glyphosate.
Life's too short to indulge silly tricks played by maniacs.
Goats for weed control in summer goat curry in winterWe have loads of invasive Himalayan Balsam around here. Almost impossible to spray, too much and it is interwoven with native species. It pulls easily, but is often growing through brambles on steep hillsides and streams. It's an annual, so if you pull it before it seeds, it will go away, eventually.
Goats grazing it would be perfect, its non- toxic to animals, just a problem of goat containment. Those fancy GPS collars on Clarkson's farm look good for containment, but spendy.
It's banned as a weedkiller but can still be used as a compost accelerator or for stump removal.I thought the EU had banned Ammonium Sulphamate ?
The use of any chemical is detrimental to something and there will be side effects.
Best get a goat.
Sold a stump and root killer. The leaflet says it is banned as a weed killer but gives the strengths required for various weeds.It's banned as a weedkiller but can still be used as a compost accelerator or for stump removal.
Ammonium Sulphamate, a dash of soap. Its systemic so kills the roots as per Glyphosate but without the questionable safety issues surrounding it.
Arable farming’s ‘dirty little secret’. Glyphosate probably used to clear the weeds before cultivation, too, or they come up under the crop and choke the combine. And that cereal monoculture needs to be re-established every year with a lot of tractor work, and insecticides, fungicides, growth regulators, etc, if you don’t want flea beetle, toxic ergot, or a crop that falls over.Farmers were/are using glyphosate as a desiccant on standing grain crops to reduce drying costs after harvesting. Thats how so much got into the food chain, totally nuts. Probably perfectly OK if just used as a weedkiller on non-cropped land.

I’ve just laid waste to the weeds in the gravel yard with pelargonic acid (Weedol), with some blue dye added to show where I’ve been. It’s a ‘natural’ weedkiller, derived from pelargoniums, and is a fatty acid which pops the cell walls and burns/dessicates the plant. Non-systemic.I don't think ammonium sulphamate is banned as a weed killer, just not licensed as it hasn't gone through EU testing. The same can be said about custard, flared trousers and earwax, they're not licensed as weed killers but not banned.![]()
Would this also kill brambles?Ammonium Sulphamate, a dash of soap. Its systemic so kills the roots as per Glyphosate but without the questionable safety issues surrounding it.
It will, with the right application, kill everything.Would this also kill brambles?
Edit; answered by @knighty so yes, how did you apply it?
salt and fairy liquid wont harm petsI spray white vinegar and found that to be ok if done on a regular basis.
Not always easy to time so once or twice a year with a strimmer.
Will try adding soap and salt but have to be a bit carefull for this one
View attachment 500435
I can’t imagine any dog or cat licking that more than once.salt and fairy liquid wont harm pets



