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hunnerbun_gw

Horse or MaresTail....

hunnerbun
17 years ago

UGH...this is the new bane of my existance! I don't know if it was all the rain we got last year that caused the epidemic I have in my beds but I can not keep up with the stuff. I went out last week and sprayed a bunch of it with Roundup, but it hasn't seemed to have made any difference at all. I have been breaking off the tall spore stalks as soon as I see one poking up out of the ground, but the soil I got laste year must have been loaded with the stuff, but it just waited in silence for the right opportunity to sprout!

Does anyone have any easy (I know...right)ways to eradicate this stuff from the garden...short of digging and sifting the whole bed?

I think I am doomed to have this stuff forever...I found this on a site when I googled it:

Horse or Mares Tail

Horse or Mares Tail, Equisetum Arvense is, in my opinion, public enemy number one. It looks like it belongs in Jurassic Park and, unchecked, spreads like wildfire.

In spring, brown green shoots appear with small cones at the tips that produce spores. (Arghh millions of Âem) and it grows away from creeping thin brown roots that you can hardly see as they are soil coloured. Digging out these roots is not feasible  they go down into the soil for up to 1.5 metres  yes, 5 feet.

Later the Âleaves or tails appear. These will die off as autumn turns to winter and the roots sit there waiting for spring. The leaves have a waxy coat, which makes the plant highly resistant to weedkillers.

Crushing the leaves to break up the coating helps weedkiller to penetrate and become absorbed but in large areas it is not so easy to crush all the leaves . However, glyphosate weed killer will have an effect and eventually kill the plant. You will probably need 5 or more applications. Knock it back, it re-grows and you repeat.

I donÂt think you can clear this in less than one season.

Amicide seems to be a far more effective weed killer. It can kill it in one application but may well need two.

IÂd recommend NOT digging where there is horsetail until it is dead for sure. Otherwise it just starts springing up from the root cuttings. Drying or drowning the roots prior to composting is a must.

I've been contacted by Mr Charles Bailey who points out that Horestail is correctly applied to the weed growing on land whereas Marestail is correctly applied to the weed growing in water.

He also puts forth an organic control method, which he says is effective.

Without resorting to chemicals you can control/irradicate horse tail by digging/forking through the soil when it is in the right condition: ie not too wet and sticky!

Once you have removed as much as possible, any that shoots is easily dealt with. Before it reaches 3 ins/7cm high, hoe off an inch below the surface.

Eventually the food supply in the root is exhausted. Let it get bigger than stated and food begins to be stored in the roots again, and round and round you go ad infinitum.

Never touch Horsetail with a mechanical cultivator. If you do you will understand why it has been around for 60 million years

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