• Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    But the entire point of growing something is to eat it. Or be useful in some way at least, considered bamboo for free canes but it sounds like it can damage concrete around it and even clumping bamboo would try and grow larger than the space I have fairly quickly due to the narrow width.

    • Seleni@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      It would probably need a fair bit of water, too, unless you’re in a more humid climate with summer rains. It is a grass after all.

      Unless you planted a tropical clumper, the concrete wouldn’t take damage. A runner would probably pass under it and show up on the other side eventually though. You can stop that by cutting the rhizomes back in summer and fall (think of it like edging a lawn), but it sounds like that space might be too narrow to set that sort of system up well.

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        17 hours ago

        Yeah, that is why I am thinking of planting mint there instead. Should come up with some ways to preserve large amounts of mint when I have it for when its dead over winter though. Mint jelly is an obvious one.

        I think mint honey should have a decent shelf life too without requiring refrigeration. Probably isn’t that different from mint jelly but using honey as a source of sugar and it isn’t set with pectin, which shouldn’t really impact the shelf life. Use it like a sweet minty syrup.

    • MintyAnt@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Growing food plants to eat, yes, the point is to eat.

      Growing non food plants, the primary purpose is to support your ecosystem. Bugs pollinators birds etc. They rely on native plants only, and need them to survive.

      Beyond that people also like the look of flowers and having them grow or thrive over time.

      Good on you for not willfully growing something invasive or non native like bamboo (assuming it’s not in your native range)!

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        2 days ago

        The impression I get is some types of bamboo can grow non invasively, though not native either. But would need more space to grow and may not be a great yield in the first place grown in the UK.

        Helping bees is always a bonus, in my back garden I have chives and sage that both get quite a bit of attention from the bees. Also growing thyme and rosemary but they don’t seem to care for that. Poppy patch is also loved by bees, was hoping to use the poppy seeds for baking but don’t really get that much. Shitloads for growing more poppies but not very useful to eat.

        When I planted the lawn (was previously concrete paved across the entire garden) I used a mix of meadow grass and clover, but the clover hasn’t really done much which is a shame. Don’t care for obsessively treated lawns, it’s a space to sit down. Not certain, maybe park grass would have been better? Don’t really know tbh, ideally want something that will grow deep roots and is never going to have artificial fertiliser or any other treatments because fuck that effort and money.

        Probably never going to water it either, beyond maybe dumping not too filthy waste water on it if available. Currently got 300L combined of rainwater storage, but that is reserved for the plants I can eat.

        • MintyAnt@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          The mixed lawn is great mostly because it’s less maintenance. The clover doesn’t really do that much as a flower, it’s more the lack of needing to constantly water or use herbicides that make it so beneficial.

          Same goes for any non native flower. Yes, generalist bees visit them. It’s not helping your ecosystem though. Only plants native to you will benefit the ecosystem. The food source of non natives does not feed all insects nor is as nutritional to the ones who use it. And they can’t serve as host for any notable number of beneficial bugs. Instead, they’ll displace better native plants, and amplify bad non native bugs (which in turn will further harm native insects)

          Obviously a general exception to food plants. Unless it’s a known or potentially invasive one (e.g. Bradford pears in southern US cause brutal invasives), you’re not going to really get a native food plant, you’re growing them for food not for the ecosystem.

          While there are less aggressive types of bamboo, the point is it does not belong in your ecosystem. There’s better options. Also native plants sited right (light level) will require like no maintenance to keep alive :) It needs help when you plant it esp if you’ve got a drought, but that’s it. Getting a partially grown one from a native store (garden centers don’t tend to actually carry natives) is a solid strategy

          This finder looked fun: https://buynative.co.uk/plants/

          Anyways, overall it sounds like you’ve been thoughtful about your yard space so you’re already doing great ;) send pics!

          • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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            2 days ago

            Clover is native to the UK. It just didn’t really grow much in my garden. That site listed daisies though, might see if they like to grow in the lawn instead.

    • Barbecue Cowboy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      If you haven’t had bamboo before, can also spread unpredictably and it’s more difficult to get rid of than you expect. The varieties that tend to grow smaller are worse.

      • Seleni@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Actually it spreads very predictably (in either circles or a collection of straight lines) and if you want to get rid of it, just cut it to the ground and stumpgrind out the rhizomes, which are the only part that can spread the plant (and for most species are found in the top 12 inches of soil). If someone tells you that you need to get out every tiny root, they’re bullshitting you.

        • Barbecue Cowboy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          20 hours ago

          I’m speaking from experience, im that guy who said you might have to get out every root. Maybe we were special or maybe it was just the right environment but I started finding it in random patches coming up all over my old back yard. We tried digging it out, burning it, someone suggested tar, but nothing ever quite got ours. I wasn’t alone, but I was probably talking to other people who had it bad too. No one complains if everything is fine.

          I’m in a new house now, but never again for me.

          • Seleni@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            That’s because you missed rhizomes, not roots. And if you keep cutting the remnants down after you get the main body of the plant out they’ll starve and die eventually, it just takes a few years.

            Speaking as someone who has worked with bamboo for a living for over a decade, an ounce of maintenance is definitely worth a pound of cure. Setting up a proper root-pruning system and cutting the young rhizomes twice a year before they have a chance to spread is much easier than chasing it down after the fact.

            Now, tropical timber clumping bamboo… those are tough to deal with once they’re mature. They’re like a boulder that grows lol.