Is ivyleaf morning glory invasive?
I have an ivyleaf morning glory vine in my garden. I can't tell if it falls into the invasive/noxious category. Should I rip it out before it sets seeds or is it okay here in MA? Thanks.
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If the seeds are anything like the traditional morning glory, then you'll find it will reappear year after year. We had to remove about 6" of topsoil from the garden 5 years ago. I still find morning glories appearing from time to time even though I haven't grown any in all that time. The seeds are very hard and can stay dormant in the soil for several years. Digging in the garden brings some to the surface. They're easy enough to pull out if you spot them, but they do drop alot of seeds.
Newt
Newt
I'm not sure if it's the same, but we call perenial Morning Glory, Bindweed in our area and it is VERY invasive (zone . I'm been fightin gthese things all summer to stop it from choking everything in sight.
It climbs on my rhodos, hydrageas, astilbies, etc.. What I've resorted to is daily manual weeding and spot herbicide on the root base and spraying the leaves.
It climbs on my rhodos, hydrageas, astilbies, etc.. What I've resorted to is daily manual weeding and spot herbicide on the root base and spraying the leaves.
Slakker, the roots of mature bindweed can go 14' deep in the soil! Bindweed is not morning glory, it's Convolvulus arvensis. This site has some interesting info on it.
https://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/WEEDS/field_bindweed.html
I don't agree with their chemical recommendations, but if you have some mature plants that you haven't been able to eliminate, you might want to try this with vinegar.
Put about an inch of vinegar in a clear plastic container with a tight fitting lid like you might get at the deli with potato salad. Cut a slit in the lid and insert the tips of the vine in the vinegar when in active growth (has leaves on it and the leaves need to be in the solution). Leave the vines in the solution for 48 hours and then cut the vines near the lid. To remove the vine from the lid, be sure and take the container to a safe place so that no vinegar splashes on anything precious. You can reuse the vinegar until it is all absorbed. Everytime I find a new sprout I do this same procedure.
Good luck,
Newt
https://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/WEEDS/field_bindweed.html
I don't agree with their chemical recommendations, but if you have some mature plants that you haven't been able to eliminate, you might want to try this with vinegar.
Put about an inch of vinegar in a clear plastic container with a tight fitting lid like you might get at the deli with potato salad. Cut a slit in the lid and insert the tips of the vine in the vinegar when in active growth (has leaves on it and the leaves need to be in the solution). Leave the vines in the solution for 48 hours and then cut the vines near the lid. To remove the vine from the lid, be sure and take the container to a safe place so that no vinegar splashes on anything precious. You can reuse the vinegar until it is all absorbed. Everytime I find a new sprout I do this same procedure.
Good luck,
Newt