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<blockquote data-quote="Princess Pooper" data-source="post: 7515293" data-attributes="member: 971"><p>It's an absolute b*gger. We have used grazon which does kill hemlock but - if it's growing in grass, then the grass survives and leaves less bare soil than with glyphosate for more hemlock seeds to germinate. </p><p></p><p>It's probably not the same plant that is growing back when you have sprayed, just more seed geminated in the bare ground. </p><p></p><p>Before now when it got ahead of us we cut the seeding stems and then burned them just to reduce seed spread. So many farmers do not recognise it and unfortunately the reduction in verge mowing has allowed it to thrive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Princess Pooper, post: 7515293, member: 971"] It's an absolute b*gger. We have used grazon which does kill hemlock but - if it's growing in grass, then the grass survives and leaves less bare soil than with glyphosate for more hemlock seeds to germinate. It's probably not the same plant that is growing back when you have sprayed, just more seed geminated in the bare ground. Before now when it got ahead of us we cut the seeding stems and then burned them just to reduce seed spread. So many farmers do not recognise it and unfortunately the reduction in verge mowing has allowed it to thrive. [/QUOTE]
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