figmo@lll-crg.ARpA (Lynn Gold) (10/20/86)
One of the previous owners of our house or the house next door planted some ivy way-back-when. This obnoxious ivy has taken over an entire flowerbed where I'd like to plant some flowering shrubs such as hibiscus. The ivy is growing under our front porch, over one of our fences, under the shrubs that separate our place from our neighbor's, and crawls up one of the neighbor's trees. I think our neighbor likes the ivy on the tree. Is there a way I can get rid of the $&*#! ivy without killing off the shrubs that already exist? Can I kill it off in such away that I could grow interesting plants (read: ANYTHING but $#*&! ivy!) there? We've only had our place a year, yet already this ivy has chocked out many plants in spite of our trimming it back. Thanks, --Lynn -- UUCP: ...lll-crg!figmo ARPA: Lynn%PANDA@SUMEX-AIM *********************************************************************** * Any resemblance between my postings and any person, living or dead, * * is purely coincidental. Besides, I'm only a guest user here... * ***********************************************************************
kjp@well.UUCP (Karen Paulsell) (11/10/86)
I just ripped it out -- tons of elbow grease, and it generated lots of trash. I watered well, waited a few days, and then started pulling and pulling and pulling. I picked up all the bits and pieces that I could. The next year, I dug up all the sprouts. I still get bits, and some creeps out from next door, but I'd rather use the old elbow grease than poison. My climate ain't that much different, and it did work pretty well. I mean, some people pay lots of money to get a workout like that!