Followers

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Agapanthus - Not a problem second edition

Agapanthus plants after 23 - 29 and 33 days after treatment with Cut'n'Paste into the central whorl of the growing point.  The plants have lost all vigour and most leaves are withered and disolving.

Dscf5022
Dscf5024
Dscf5023

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Cut'n'Paste Prize Draw from Waitakere Home and Garden Show

Cut'n'Paste is pleased to announce that the 20L of Cut'n'Paste prize draw from the Waitakere Home and Garden Show was won by Adele Smaill of Cooks Beach.

Adele says that the Cut'n'Paste will go the a project she works on with plant and animal pest control in the Cooks Beach to Ferry Landing area - as a contractor to "Thames Coromandel District Council".  

"With limited budgets, your donation means there will be more money available for my labour and purchasing native plants to "heal" weed damaged sites. Projects of special focus are the Ferry Landing Cemetary and Shakespeare Cliff Reserve. Weeds that I'm looking forward to "cutting'n'pasting" include privet, woolly nightshade, tradescantia, cotoneaster, wattles, phoenix palm, pampas, agapanthus, gorse, blackberry, spanish heath, climbing asparagus fern, dumped succulants and cactii. The list goes on ..."

Cheers
Adele Smaill

Saturday, May 12, 2012

The History of Cut'n'Paste


weeding-benblain.jpgThe natives were restless; Andy Spence, was seriously considering resorting to ‘tractor’ methods to control an epidemic weed infestation on ‘WeedHeke’. That was until he discovered a way to ‘cut’ his weed problem down to size. He explains:

“Years ago Waiheke was known at the ARC (Auckland Regional Council) as ‘WeedHeke’, with good reason – it was considered to be the weediest place on the planet, second only to Hawaii!  

A park ranger on Waiheke Island in Auckland for 16 years and a biosecurity officer for five, when I started working at Whakanewha Regional Park I saw that it would be an enormous job to get the weeds there under control.  

Many people on the island wanted me to adopt a chemical-free approach, so I invited them to help, and show me how this would be possible.  A few hardy folk turned out and, after a couple of days of hard work, we all realised that we were not going to win our war on weeds that way.

Some areas were beyond salvation; the weeds so outnumbered the natives that the best approach was to hire a mulching tractor, mulch it all to the ground and keep going until the tractor couldn’t fit between the natives to reach the next Chinese privet or cotoneaster or gorse bush without chopping down a native.  At this point, the hard work of removing the weeds by hand began.  

In the mulched areas we heavily sowed rye grass seed and allowed it to grow thickly through the autumn and winter. Then, in spring, we sprayed the huge growth of weeds with Triclopyr, a broadleaf herbicide which left the grass untouched.  The grass then thrived and smothered most further weed growth. The following spring, replanting could begin. It was then quite easy to accomplish and all that was subsequently required was annual hand weeding.

The hand removal of weeds was gruelling and by far the hardest of tasks.  Each weed had to be cut and pasted with a herbicide to prevent re-growth then a native planted in its place. 

weeding-cutnpaste.jpgTo help solve this problem I really needed a gel herbicide which used a low toxicity form of Glyphosate to make it safer and easier for volunteers. Unable to find such a product on the market, I developed my own. The result was Cut‘n’Paste, a broad spectrum brush on Herbicide. 

By killing grass weeds, such as pampass and kikuyu, as well as the mass of climbing and smothering weeds and tree species, including privets, rhamnus and woolly nightshade, Cut‘n’Paste has proved to be a most effective solution. 

Although the Whakanewha Regional Park is now looking a treat, there are still many years of weed control ahead; but what a difference we have made!”

Cut‘n’Paste is also ideal for the smallest of backyards; more information about this invaluable product is available at: cutnpaste.co.nz. 

The history of Cut'n'Paste


weeding-benblain.jpgThe natives were restless; Andy Spence, was seriously considering resorting to ‘tractor’ methods to control an epidemic weed infestation on ‘WeedHeke’. That was until he discovered a way to ‘cut’ his weed problem down to size. He explains:

“Years ago Waiheke was known at the ARC (Auckland Regional Council) as ‘WeedHeke’, with good reason – it was considered to be the weediest place on the planet, second only to Hawaii!  

A park ranger on Waiheke Island in Auckland for 16 years and a biosecurity officer for five, when I started working at Whakanewha Regional Park I saw that it would be an enormous job to get the weeds there under control.  

Many people on the island wanted me to adopt a chemical-free approach, so I invited them to help, and show me how this would be possible.  A few hardy folk turned out and, after a couple of days of hard work, we all realised that we were not going to win our war on weeds that way.

Some areas were beyond salvation; the weeds so outnumbered the natives that the best approach was to hire a mulching tractor, mulch it all to the ground and keep going until the tractor couldn’t fit between the natives to reach the next Chinese privet or cotoneaster or gorse bush without chopping down a native.  At this point, the hard work of removing the weeds by hand began.  

In the mulched areas we heavily sowed rye grass seed and allowed it to grow thickly through the autumn and winter. Then, in spring, we sprayed the huge growth of weeds with Triclopyr, a broadleaf herbicide which left the grass untouched.  The grass then thrived and smothered most further weed growth. The following spring, replanting could begin. It was then quite easy to accomplish and all that was subsequently required was annual hand weeding.

The hand removal of weeds was gruelling and by far the hardest of tasks.  Each weed had to be cut and pasted with a herbicide to prevent re-growth then a native planted in its place. 

weeding-cutnpaste.jpgTo help solve this problem I really needed a gel herbicide which used a low toxicity form of Glyphosate to make it safer and easier for volunteers. Unable to find such a product on the market, I developed my own. The result was Cut‘n’Paste, a broad spectrum brush on Herbicide. 

By killing grass weeds, such as pampass and kikuyu, as well as the mass of climbing and smothering weeds and tree species, including privets, rhamnus and woolly nightshade, Cut‘n’Paste has proved to be a most effective solution. 

Although the Whakanewha Regional Park is now looking a treat, there are still many years of weed control ahead; but what a difference we have made!”

Cut‘n’Paste is also ideal for the smallest of backyards; more information about this invaluable product is available at: cutnpaste.co.nz. 

Monday, May 7, 2012

Agapanthus - Not a problem

The pictures below show graphically the time taken for Agapanthus to show severe yellowing after treatment.  The plants have been kept in an airy light location well watered.  In these conditions they meet their maker most quickly.  The first photo shows the plants in order of treatment with the control on the right.  The plant to the leftmost is the first treated 20 days ago, then 16 then 10 days.

The set of four photos shows the individual plants.  I will put up photos in a months time of the progressive die back.

Agapanthus_in_stages_of_dying_after_treatment_with_cutnpaste