Plants of Eeeeeeevil - Page 2

register ::  Login Password  :: Lost Password?
This Thread
Bookmark this thread:
 
 
 
 
 
 
  •  
  • Subject
  • Author
  • Date
Posted by none on September 30, 2007, 4:28 am
 
please rate
this thread
A kettle of boiling water, dribled into the centre of the plant, worked
on mine.

Chookie wrote:



Posted by Flowergirl on September 30, 2007, 6:27 pm
 

LOL - a little more subtle than DH's method ....
First, remove all lawn with a shovel.
Second, use a flame-thrower and go over entire yard
Thirdly returf yard.

(Before I met him, DH was living in a share house with a few people,
including the house's owner.  The yard was wall-to-wall bindies.  The owner
decided to pay to have the yard professionally returfed, but DH got involved
in the process and included the use of the flame-thrower into the
proceedings.  While it did work, its possibly a little extreme a solution
for most people!)
Amanda



Posted by Jonno on September 30, 2007, 7:48 pm
 A steam generator and some copper pipes with delivery holes would do the
same trick, but much more efficiently, as I found a gas blowtorch only
touched the surface, but steam penetrates. Its used in hothouses to
sterilise soils.
But you have to admit it looks great using a flame thrower.
PS where do you get em?
I reckon the local chapter of Hells Angel bikies could have a field day
and I could sell em some....(grin!)


Flowergirl wrote:


Posted by Flowergirl on September 30, 2007, 10:46 pm
 

I suspect that performing the "treatment" was something that DH very much
enjoyed, so its efficiency was probably a secondary concern to the "fun" of
actually doing the job. I do know that there were no bindies in that
particular lawn for at least 6 years after the "treatment" so it did work
quite well.

Dunno where to get a flame thrower.
I suspect that the particular flame thrower in question may have been home
made.... DH is an engineer AND a farm-boy so we have a very large number of
very useful one-off devices for both the home and for the farm (but as DH
admits, they do look very "agricultural" rather than sleek and stylish).
Amanda



involved

solution