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Japanese Knotweed


rosa123

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Hi, I live in a block of flats (36 flats in the building) and we have a communal garden. We think we have spotted Japanese knotweed on the garden, but would like confirmation before we look into the eye-watering cost of removal. Can anyone help? Does anyone have any experience of this/local removal firms? Thanks.
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If it's in your own garden, tackle it yourself with glyphosate. It is doable if you are persistent.


The only reason (that I can see) to get one of these companies in is that you can pay a fixed price for complete eradication with an n year guarantee, to keep potential buyers happy.

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It does take several seasons with glyphosate to completely eradicate the weed, but it does work - assiduously spraying as soon as it leafs up in the spring and regularly repeating the dose will do it. The commercial eradicators will also often dig up the weeds roots as much as they can. This is a big job. The weed is very vigorous and should only be burnt if it is being disposed of. Because the stem is hollow but segmented (like a bamboo) cutting it and directly apply glyphosate into the stem will not work - you must drench the leaves.


The commercial removal route is preferable if you are aiming to sell the property quickly - as mortgage companies hate it. In fact the weed is not as damaging to the built environment as was first thought/ feared (it will not undermine and bring down walls etc.) - but mortgage companies, like insurers, take the precautionary principle to ridiculous lengths. If you see it growing 'in the wild' (it was quite common in e.g. Camberwell Old Cemetery) it's actually quite pretty, especially in flower.

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Had this when I was selling (I had no idea what it was, mortgage survey found it). Even though it was 60ft from the house in the garden the buyers had to get a new mortgage so reduced their purchase price. I also had to pay for a company to remove it (luckily split with next door as turned out they had it too). The bonus with using them is they offer a 5 year guarantee.
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Penguin68 Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Because the stem is hollow but segmented (like a bamboo)

> cutting it and directly apply glyphosate into the

> stem will not work - you must drench the leaves.


Stem filling can work very well... I know from experience... but you have to either make the cut at near ground level, or completely cut off the top and break up the internal structure with a long rod of some description.


But yes, regularly drenching the leaves with a concentrated glyphosate preparation does work too.

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I have some in the back garden, was appalled when i first realised. But we applied the poison down the cut off stem. It's less vigorous now. (the council offered to do it for a few thousand!) I don't really think it is to be feared as much as I thought. However my neighbour has a knotweed garden, and insisted on digging it up and wondering why it came back. I have heard that burning can work.
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  • 3 weeks later...

Glycophosphate (aka glyphosphate / Roundup) inhibits an enzyme essential to plant growth. It is not very effective against Japanese Knotweed's underground rhizomes but will kill foliage thus starving the rhizomes over time.


An environmentally friendlier herbicide that kills foliage on contact is 15-20% vinegar solution (handle with care), which is non-toxic, fully bio-degradable and causes no river/water-table pollution or human/animal health concerns.


Recent research by Swansea University into knotweed extermination can be accessed from this page near the bottom:

Swansea University scientists lead the way in tackling Japanese knotweed

or directly at:

Optimising physiochemical control of invasive Japanese knotweed

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We tried to buy a house with knotweed in the garden and was told by the surveyor ?I would not buy this house at any cost?. Probably overkill, but it put us off and I imagine it will put others off too. I?d definitely start to get rid of it. It is absolutely illegal to dispose of it in anything other than very controlled circumstances so don?t put it in your brown bin!


Good luck getting rid, you can definitely tackle it alone with the help of your neighbours and the right product.

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Or at least don't put it in your brown bin and shout "Hey everyone, I've just put a load of Japanese Knotweed in my brown bin."


Or you might find someone who lives in a rented property who will be happy to put it on their compost heap.

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