Uk Economy Is Headed For The Worst Of...
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No best answer has yet been selected by xwordmad. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If this is the weed that I think you're talking about, it's virtually impossible to get rid of, at least in my experience. It tends to break when you pull it, so there's always bits of it left in the ground, and it sends roots almost impossibly deep, so no matter what you do or what you think you've achieved, it always seems to come back. It's a strange looking plant, and apparently hasn't changed much since the carboniferous period (?). If this is correct, then it's because it's a damn good survivor and so doesn't have much incentive to develop any further.
No, I have no idea how to get rid of it, short of dousing the entire area with the strongest weedkiller you can find, turning the ground over after a week or two, repeating the application, and then maybe one more time. But if you think it's gone for good after that, I wouldn't hold your breath. Sooner or later, it'll be back!
horsetail is virtually impossible to get rid of completely. its roots go down several feet into the ground and from what ive researched on the net the plant that grows in your garden could be the same plant growing in a garden a mile away i.e it spreads underground all over the neighbourhood, like fungus does.
ive also read that it is pretty resistant to most weedkillers cos it has a waxy coating on the stems, apparently the only chance you have is to scrape the stem with a knife and then spray the weedkiller on.
my approach to dealing with it is to simply dig up the stem everytime one pops up so the leaves cant develop, the plant then cannot collect light to produce food, this weakens the plant and stops it growing so prolifically.