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#1
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![]() Hi, I'm new to this forum and wondered if anyone could give me some advice. I know some bamboo species can be invasive but having planted it before and not having had much success in the past, I thought it would be okay planting one on the edge of my patio and fairly near to the pond we built a couple of years ago. What a mistake it was to be as the bamboo has flourished and though looks beautiful, it has been breaking through the pond liner and thus reducing the level of water on a regular basis. I have effectively 'buried my head in the sand' until now but the problem must be remedied as topping up the pond is becoming an almost daily task and I'm worried about the risk that reduced levels will have on the fish in the pond. The liner is a heavy duty rubber one. Someone said to me that I could replace it with a special type of cement which would prevent subsequent bamboo shoots from breaking through. Is this the case and if so, what is this type of cement called? Are there any other suggestions you may have? Any other material that will be impervious to bamboo shoots? Or will I simply have to dig up the bamboo. If so, you'll know, this will be very difficult to carry out successfully. Thank you in advance. -- organic_jann |
#2
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On Wed, 1 Nov 2006 08:49:14 +0000, organic_jann
wrote: The liner is a heavy duty rubber one. Someone said to me that I could replace it with a special type of cement which would prevent subsequent bamboo shoots from breaking through. Is this the case and if so, what is this type of cement called? Are there any other suggestions you may have? Any other material that will be impervious to bamboo shoots? Or will I simply have to dig up the bamboo. If so, you'll know, this will be very difficult to carry out successfully. I didn't notice you are in the UK until after I hit reply, and I already read some of the FAQ on this site: http://www.americanbamboo.org/ Perhaps the "type of cement" was meant to be a concrete barrier? And perhaps you could get a trenching machine to dig a trench along part of the perimeter of your pond, or around your bamboo patch and simply pour concrete into the trench? Sounds easier than pouring a concrete pond liner. Regards, Hal |
#3
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On Wed, 1 Nov 2006 08:49:14 +0000, organic_jann wrote:
Hi, I'm new to this forum and wondered if anyone could give me some advice. I know some bamboo species can be invasive but having planted it before and not having had much success in the past, I thought it would be okay planting one on the edge of my patio and fairly near to the pond we built a couple of years ago. What a mistake it was to be as the bamboo has flourished and though looks beautiful, it has been breaking through the pond liner and thus reducing the level of water on a regular basis. I have effectively 'buried my head in the sand' until now but the problem must be remedied as topping up the pond is becoming an almost daily task and I'm worried about the risk that reduced levels will have on the fish in the pond. The liner is a heavy duty rubber one. Someone said to me that I could replace it with a special type of cement which would prevent subsequent bamboo shoots from breaking through. Is this the case and if so, what is this type of cement called? Are there any other suggestions you may have? Any other material that will be impervious to bamboo shoots? Or will I simply have to dig up the bamboo. If so, you'll know, this will be very difficult to carry out successfully. Thank you in advance. The best thing to do is contain the bamboo. Dig around it to 18" deep and put in a metal collar that its runners can't go thru, and reline the pond with new rubber. ~ jan HTHs :-) -------------- See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#4
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organic_jann wrote:
Is this the case and if so, what is this type of cement called? Are there any other suggestions you may have? Any other material that will be impervious to bamboo shoots? Or will I simply have to dig up the bamboo. If so, you'll know, this will be very difficult to carry out successfully. Portland Cement. If forms concrete. Usually 4" to 6" sill stop bamboo. Bamboo spread from the roots. About the only way to kill it is with roundup. I would cut it down and paint the stumps with roundup. Also paint any new shoots with roundup. There are two basic types of bamboo, the virulent spreading bamboo and the somewhat benign clump bamboo. -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to 18,000 gallon (17'x 47'x 2-4') lily pond garden in Zone 6 Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA |
#5
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![]() Thank you for your suggestions - much appreciated. A trench sounds a good idea though it will mean taking up part of the patio which I guess I had expected to have to do in order to solve the problem. A metal collar may also do the trick, though the shoots if they are coming from the root, may not solve it completely. I could dig a cement trench as well as place a metal collar. I'm a little wary of using Roundup as I really don't like using weedkiller due to there being a lot of wildlife in my garden, as well as my fish and I'd like to keep my bamboo somehow, even if it means having to dig it up and replant elsewhere. Thanks once again for your advice. -- organic_jann |
#6
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On Thu, 2 Nov 2006 09:23:37 +0000, organic_jann
wrote: Thank you for your suggestions - much appreciated. A trench sounds a good idea though it will mean taking up part of the patio which I guess I had expected to have to do in order to solve the problem. A metal collar may also do the trick, though the shoots if they are coming from the root, may not solve it completely. I could dig a cement trench as well as place a metal collar. I'm a little wary of using Roundup as I really don't like using weedkiller due to there being a lot of wildlife in my garden, as well as my fish and I'd like to keep my bamboo somehow, even if it means having to dig it up and replant elsewhere. Thanks once again for your advice. Bamboo is a curse. Once it's takes hold there is no stopping it. You can pour used motore oil on it and it will still thrive. Roundup is useless against it. Physical barriers are the only answer and it will still require constant vigilance to keep it within the barrier. |
#7
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![]() "organic_jann" wrote in message news ![]() Hi, I'm new to this forum and wondered if anyone could give me some advice. I know some bamboo species can be invasive ......... ============================ It's a curse once established. I remember a clump on the property where I lived before moving here. I keep one small clump in a solid bottomed pot but think I'll get rid of it this year. It's not even all that attractive. Don't try and compost it. Haul it to a dumpster or burn it. -- KL.... Frugal ponding since 1995. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
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