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[Misc] Gardening advice - bamboo



Motogull

Todd Warrior
Sep 16, 2005
10,475
Our predecessors had some in. It took ages to get rid. You could at least follow the roots to dog them out. I have no idea if our neighbours had similar problems.

We have some in pots.
 






dazzer6666

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Mar 27, 2013
55,530
Burgess Hill
We had a concrete shed base built over where there was bamboo in our garden. It’s still popping up and expanding the other side of the fence, up through the neighbours decking etc. Absolute nightmare
 


LamieRobertson

Not awoke
Feb 3, 2008
48,416
SHOREHAM BY SEA
All the best with this :)

….sorry to say but if left it will just get worse….if you are going to use a industrial strength weed killer (chop down to ground first then wait for green shoots, then apply) … maybe try one area at a time to check effect…yes they should have put in some sort of barrier below ground ..but you say its by the fence so doing that now will be tricky (not impossible)..but a lot of hard work that you really shouldn’t have to do….alternatively you just keep cutting it down to the ground ..forever….you did mention something about the possibility of the fence being damaged, presumably from their side ..I’d be taking photographs to prove how it looks now, should in the future it deteriorate, so that in a worst case scenario it ended up in court …alternatively send round the guy Kevo met during his flat move to have words
 
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Weststander

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2011
69,271
Withdean area
Assuming the neighbours won’t take action and you don’t go legal, gradually if you want to take it easy, dig a trench flush to the fence, deep enough to see all the roots. Then clear them, every single bit (remove from your garden, do not compost!) from your garden. On the roots not under your land, apply Roundup Tree-stump & Root Killer. Controversial stuff for your own health, I’d use a mask over your mouth/nose and chemical use rubber gloves. Will probably require a few treatments.

You’re all allowed to remove all overhanging bamboo, under an ancient law I think you have to have it to offer back to them!?

You might need to make the trench permanent to prevent spread. So make it narrow. Or would concrete or a concrete block wall stop bamboo roots?

Then plant something nice your side to hide that.
 




Iggle Piggle

Well-known member
Sep 3, 2010
5,952
A picture of it so we can give it an i.d. Different types require different measures to control it...even if it's coming through/under the fence. Be prepared for a bit of manual graft though. I think you'll find there is nothing to get your neighbour to deal with it your side but it is controllable
giant-panda-eating-bamboo-27449708.jpg
 






gasbag

New member
Dec 2, 2016
10
My Mum has a problem with bamboo in her neighbour's garden. It spreads to her side and at one time I was having to dig the roots out as well as I could every 2-3 weeks during the summer - not easy because her house is built on a former industrial site and there's lots of rubble and hardcore just below a thin layer of soil. Someone recommended me to let the shoots grow enough that there's a hollow inside the shoots when you cut them off and then pour glyphosate weedkiller into the hollow. It doesn't stop it but it does slow it down and I now only have to treat it and then dig the roots out twice a year, and I'm doing no noticeable harm to surrounding plants or the main bamboo plant next door.
 










Happy Exile

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Apr 19, 2018
2,134
Thanks everyone for the advice and laughs. Pictures as requested. One shows the height and maybe enough to identify type, the other shows just some of what’s growing through on our side. I’m also constantly cutting back overgrowth and ivy that is coming through the panels from their side.

IMG_9332.jpeg
 

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jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,507
Brighton
Don't worry, you've been cutting it back on your side while they've done f all. Soon enough some shoots will come up in their house
 


Coldeanseagull

Opinionated
Mar 13, 2013
8,353
Coldean
Looking at the pictures, I first thought it was psuedosasa japonica....but it could be phyllostachys bissettii....probably the former. As others have suggested dynamite I mean dig a narrow trench and just remove all that pass.
Tools required:
Mattock, pruning saw, loppers(bypass type), reciprocating saw, root breaker, draining spade.
You don't need all of them, but they all make life a little bit easier
 










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