Posted by Jeanne Stockdale on September 21, 2005, 11:44 am
Can anyone identify the plant (or is it a weed?) in attached photos. I
suspect it may be a member of the (hardy) geranium family. The root system
is very similar and the leaves are also similar (although smaller) to some
of the varied geraniums in the same bed. However it doesn't seem to flower
and wraps itself around any other plant it can.
As well as identifying it, I would also like help with getting rid of it -
the roots travel a long way and when I try to pull them out, of course they
break off!!
Thanks for any help
Jeanne
http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed002.jpg
http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed003.jpg
Posted by Stewart Robert Hinsley on September 21, 2005, 1:27 pm
>Can anyone identify the plant (or is it a weed?) in attached photos. I
>suspect it may be a member of the (hardy) geranium family. The root system
>is very similar and the leaves are also similar (although smaller) to some
>of the varied geraniums in the same bed. However it doesn't seem to flower
>and wraps itself around any other plant it can.
>As well as identifying it, I would also like help with getting rid of it -
>the roots travel a long way and when I try to pull them out, of course they
>break off!!
>Thanks for any help
>Jeanne
>http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed002.jpg
>http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed003.jpg
The unusual context (i.e. pulled up) interferes with the plant
identification neural network, but I think that it's creeping cinquefoil
(Potentilla reptans).
I only got the one look at the first photo before your bandwidth quota
filled. An alternative would be trailing tormentil (Potentilla anglica)
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley
Posted by ned on September 21, 2005, 3:27 pm
> Can anyone identify the plant (or is it a weed?) in attached photos.
I
> suspect it may be a member of the (hardy) geranium family. The root
system
> is very similar and the leaves are also similar (although smaller)
to some
> of the varied geraniums in the same bed. However it doesn't seem to
flower
> and wraps itself around any other plant it can.
> As well as identifying it, I would also like help with getting rid
of it -
> the roots travel a long way and when I try to pull them out, of
course they
> break off!!
> Thanks for any help
> Jeanne
> http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed002.jpg
> http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed003.jpg
Yes, I'd go for Creeping Cinquefoil, too.
There are some geranium leaves showing bottom left and top right of
the 003.jpg but they are not truly similar to the cinqefoil.
Getting rid? If it is in a flower bed, patience, diligence and
tenacity.
Remove as much as you can, whenever you can.
...... Or, you could treat that bed as a wild flower area.
;-)
--
ned
http://www.bugsandweeds.co.uk
last update 10.09.2005
>suspect it may be a member of the (hardy) geranium family. The root system
>is very similar and the leaves are also similar (although smaller) to some
>of the varied geraniums in the same bed. However it doesn't seem to flower
>and wraps itself around any other plant it can.
>As well as identifying it, I would also like help with getting rid of it -
>the roots travel a long way and when I try to pull them out, of course they
>break off!!
>Thanks for any help
>Jeanne
>http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed002.jpg
>http://www.geocities.com/thecanalshop/Jeannesweed003.jpg