Jump to content

Bamboo removal


Recommended Posts

We need someone who knows what they are doing to remove and take away a fairly big bamboo in our garden, its spreading and will get out of control, its about 12 foot high, would need to be chopped down and dug out we think. We are considering doing this depending on the cost, please pm me if you can give a rough quote, thanks in advance :)
Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/32380-bamboo-removal/
Share on other sites

I'd be interested in taking it and having it in my garden if it is dug up. Perhaps the gardening could quote for digging it up and your place then planting it in mine? Just looking to buy some but seems a shame to kill a perfectly healthy plant and buy a new one. Happy to plan it myself, but it sounds like it isn't a clump forming one so will need a bamboo barrier which it might be easier for a gardener to do!


let me know


sarah

Bamboo is a pest like Japanese knot weed.

It is difficult to keep under control and roots near impossible to remove.


It is recommended that any plants are surrounded with 6ft deep heavy duty plastic barriers

To prevent roots spreading horizontally and damaging nearby properties.


Replant at your peril.


Foxy

sarahbranson Wrote:

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

> ok thanks. Any other suggestions for a good

> screening plant then as the bamboo works

> brilliantly at the back of my garden and hasn't

> spread at all. I could easily plant it with a

> barrier. Are you a gardener Foxy? I appreciate

> your advice


No... :) Alost everything I try and Grow dies..


apart from Geraniums $ Marigolds.. and they just need water..

Seem to get enough of that without my help..


I just googled about bamboo. seems there are many types and they seem to vary about any precautions needed.


Was just looking on the safe side.


Foxy

Gawd, Foxy.. you 'just' googled bamboo? 'After' stipulating the 6ft rhizome barrier?


Mad as a box of frogs.



You already have it, Sarah - no barrier needed for clumpers but put one in for runners. There are other methods of containment for runners besides barriers, but that's the one you can forget about once it's done (properly!).

*Bob* Wrote:

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

> Gawd, Foxy.. you 'just' googled bamboo? 'After'

> stipulating the 6ft rhizome barrier?

>

> Mad as a box of frogs.

>

>

> You already have it, Sarah - no barrier needed for

> clumpers but put one in for runners. There are

> other methods of containment for runners besides

> barriers, but that's the one you can forget about

> once it's done (properly!).


When I said 'I just Googled Bamboo' I did not mean Then. As you say 'After' stipulating the 6ft rhizome barrier?


I Meant, to find out about Bamboo, I just googled it' Before I posted about the barrier.

in my first post.


Foxy

When we moved here 6 years ago there were some nice looking bamboo plants in various places in the garden. Quite liked it at the time. 3 years later, it had taken over nearly all the garden, it was growing up through the paving slabs as well as sprouting in both neighbours gardens. It was at least 12 feet tall, if not taller and the root system was impenetrable (no chance of digging it up). No other plants would grow as they blocked out the sun and drained the soil of all nutrients. Clearly this was not clumping bamboo!

Although we liked it, we had to completely get rid as we had no garden any longer and it was a nuisance to the neighbours. We did this by first chopping it back, then had to get a man with a stump grinder to deal with the roots and finally a couple of years of spraying glyphosates on any new sprouts.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • Thank you, I will be vigilant
    • @Sue said: nobody is blaming the child, they are blaming the person who should have been watching him g) do you really think it was acceptable for that person to find the situation funny? This is the point. Adults are meant to teach their children by example. It sounds as though the adult guardian/ father in this case did not react appropriately. Had a truly sincere apology been given,  I suspect the OP would not have posted on here. It is possible the OP snapped in the heat of the moment, but they were possibly startled because they were hit from behind? If we are startled it can be instinctive to initially react with anger. I also agree that it would be highly irresponsible to let any very young child ride or walk or do anything on a busy public street without supervision- most of all to protect the child. If in this case the child was out of the adult's line of sight that is perhaps another indication that the father needs a refresh in appropriate behaviour around a child, as well as his manners.
    • Malumbu,  if none of us were there, does that mean that nobody should post anything on here unless they have witnesses from the EDF? Why would someone post something like this if it  wasn't true? This is not about whether children should or should not be cycling on the pavement. There are specific issues. a) the child was out of sight of the person supposed to be caring for him b) he appears to have been  either not looking where he was going or was out of control of the bike c) if he did see that he was about to hit someone  he apparently did not give them any kind of warning  d)  a person was unexpectedly hit from behind whilst just walking along, which in my view makes him a victim e) does the title of the thread really matter as the issue was described in the first post?  f) nobody is blaming the child, they are blaming the person who should have been watching him g) do you really think it was acceptable for that person to find the situation funny? The OP was not complaining about the 4 year old. They were complaining about an adult's lack of supervision of a 4 year old who was not capable of riding a bike and who hit someone from behind with no warning. Also, apart from reading the OP more carefully, perhaps also choose your words more carefully. Jobless? Lunatic? Charming.
    • I have to say, I too am upset about the passing of DulwichFox. He was a real local character, who unlike me, managed to stick with ED despite all of the nauseous yuppification of the last three decades. R.I.P to foxy    Louisa. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...