View allAll Photos Tagged Weed_Control,
The Bangor line looks in need of a visit from the weed control train as 80-class 68 approaches the station with the 13.20 Lisburn - Bangor.
All photographs are my copyright and must not be used without permission. Unauthorised use will result in my invoicing you £1,500 per photograph and, if necessary, taking legal action for recovery.
03 AUG 2012: A crew chief stands atop the team hauler during the opening day of the NASCAR Nationwide Series U.S. Cellular 250 presented by the Enlist Weed Control System fall race weekend at Iowa Speedway in Newton, Ia.
The 2009 National Tree Day was held at Rosherville Reserve in Mosman on Sunday 2 August with about 50 people taking part.
The tree planting area was on the southern side of the reserve up from the children’s playground in the vicinity of previous years' National Tree Days. The trees were provided by Mosman Council along with a free BBQ for all participants.
Schools Tree Day was held at the same location on Friday 31 July with approximately 100 students from year 1 and 2 at Middle Harbour Public School and Beauty Point Public School participating.
In total approximately 600 indigenous trees, shrubs and groundcovers were planted over the two tree planting days.
Prior to the planting days the area was subject to weed control using contract bush regenerators and the area was covered in mulch. There will be follow-up weed control and plant watering to help restore the site to natural bushland.
Want to help? Join our bushcare volunteers.
Clay Gregory, Crow Tribal member on his ranch. Clay Gregory participated in the ventenata control Targeted Implementation Plan. He chose to treat the infestation with aerial application of herbicide and grazing management. Crow Reservation, MT. June 2021.
Gutierrezia sarothrae (Broom snakeweed)
Dead after weed control with Kim at Science City, Maui, Hawaii.
September 26, 2011
An artificial mineral lick (also known as a salt lick) is a mineral deposit where goats and other animals can obtain nutrients essential to their survival. It provides the sodium, calcium, iron, phosphorus and zinc required for bone, muscle and other growth. This is the 'blocked' form of salt lick, as opposed to the 'bagged' variety. It is installed directly on the ground or can be mounted on a platform depending on personal taste.
The goats were being used to control the growth of weeds in the coastside town of Half Moon Bay, California. These two goats were part of a larger herd hired out to a local land owner. This method of keeping weeds to a minimum is called "mitigation".
Photo:OEH_Spot spray head, used to deliver spray accurately to biotu bush in rugged or innaccessible locations during operation in Bundjalung National Park, near Evans Head.
Video here: www.youtube.com/user/NPWSnorthern2007#p/u/19/xCHT0h_aEm8
Sprayed fields concern parent
Published in the Times-Beacon 5/12/05
By JESSICA STENSTROM
Staff Writer
LACEY -- What began as a day playing in the park turned into a health fright for one mom.
The township public works department is changing their policies in response to the incident.
Debbie Chieco was at Hebrew Park in the afternoon April 26 when True Green Chem Lawn was completing one of its regularly scheduled fertilizer sprayings on the fields. She said it was a windy day and she was concerned the chemicals were being sprayed in the presence of children on the playground.
"It was a windy day and the chemicals were being sprayed right in the middle of the afternoon," she said.
Chieco said after the company continued to spray the chemicals after she requested that they stop, she packed her two children into the car and headed home to Bayville.
She said she had added health concerns with her children because one is diagnosed with autism and the other experienced a seizure recently.
Brian Feldman, the region technical manager for True Green Chem Lawn, said there is little or no safety or health concern related to the spraying of the fertilizers.
He said application records show the township-maintained fields were treated with fertilizer, weed control and crab grass pre-emergent control on that day.
"The products being sprayed are extremely diluted. They are 93 percent water and work at very low use rates," Feldman said.
Public works Director Casey Parker said typically the parks remain open and all fields are closed for 24 hours after the spraying occurs.
He said signs are placed by the township and the True Green Chem Lawn warning both before and after the chemicals are distributed on the fields.
"We send letters to all of the athletic organizations so they know not to schedule anything for that day," Parker said.
Parker said the fields are roped off with yellow tape and extra recreation staff is used throughout any day that spraying is occurring. A staff member is in each park preventing the public from gaining access to all newly sprayed fields.
Parker said the company is contracted to spray the fields five times each year on a set schedule.
"There were some concerns (about children being in the area) and, as a result, we are going to shut down all of the parks on the day the fields are sprayed as an added precaution," Parker said.
He said there will be barricades placed at the entrances to the parks from this point forward. No one will have access for a full 24 hours.
"This is above and beyond what is necessary," Feldman said.
He said the company will stand beside whatever precautions the township decides to take.
Feldman said although it is posted to stay off fields for the full 24 hours where the company is contracted to spray in the township, after the fields dry, the residue is "negligible" and not "dislodgeable."
"People always fear the unknown, but the products we use are the same as the ones that you can buy in a home garden store," he said.
He said the only difference is his company works with the products all of the time and is licensed and trained to treat the fields
Weed control actually. Fundraiser for the Noxious Weed Committee in Madison County, MT. Lemon and Carrot cakes for 400 guests, with weeds invading a pristine landscape. You know you're out west when you throw a party for weeds in a very rural area, and 400 people show up! A little further west and it might have been a whole different kind of party.
Note: Yes we know weeds are bad for you. Silk/plastic weeds available through Montana State extension service here. Just like the real thing except for educatin' folks.
ANPC Workshop on the Translocation of Threatened Plants, Canberra, 27th & 28th March 2012.
A local parkcare group has been rehabilitating the site since 2001. Work has included weed control, rabbit control and planting of trees, shrubs, forbs and grasses. Re-introductions have mainly been by planting seedlings propagated from local seed sources, but direct seeding of Themeda australis has also been trialled. One nationally endangered forb, Leucochrysum albicans var tricolor, has been included in the plantings.
Notes adapted from Site notes provided by John Briggs.
Workshop report: www.anbg.gov.au/anpc/courses/Translocation_Canberra_March...
For current courses click visit anpc.asn.au and click on current courses and workshops.
Photographer: Tricia Hogbin
Weed control with herbicides in a dry grassland area prior to planting of native trees. Mauna Kea, Hawaii Island, Hawaii. Grasses will be severe competitors to tree seedlings in a dry environment.
When you need professional grade pest control & weed control spray equipment such as power sprayers, manual sprayers, parts & repair kits, call Quality Equipment & Spray! We have a huge selection in stock & ready to ship today. Call us at (800) 675-7485 bit.ly/ZzgwVo
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273 of 365 in 365 Days
We returned from Florida to this.
Well-intentioned though he may have been, my neighbor sprayed our yard for creeping charlie and dandelions while we were gone to Key West, Florida. Besides not asking us first before using a broad-leaf herbicide in our yard -- they won't mind some weed control, and their kids aren't here using the yard; perfect timing, he reasoned. Problem was, he neglected to read the instructions properly. Though it states "will not harm plants", that is only true for most (mature) plants when you don't spray *directly* on the plants' leaves, but rather on the ground around and under them, and spray on the plants you WANT to kill. (It can't kill something with a deep root system, unless you spray it on the leaves and stalks.)
Well, he sprayed directly on or across the day lilies, the bee balm (Monarda, a.k.a. bergamot), the coral bells (Heuchera), the bleeding hearts (Dicentra -- unharmed!!), the Phlox, the peonies, two azalea shrubs (one which was still in bloom), our oldest hostas, some ferns, and the raspberry canes. Thankfully, the azaleas do not seem to be affected, except for the sudden wilting of the bloom on the one shrub (the flowers had not started to drop off yet).
You see what has become of my beautiful day lilies. Ironically, the least-damaged day lilies here are the ones in the front, that must be cut back or relocated because of the swing set. These may be the only ones that can still flower. Most of the bulbs probably survived, but now they may only be able to put up some leaves to feed the bulb during the summer. We shall see; I must cut them back to the ground.
He will replace what dies, of course!
Friday, March 18, 2011 - Forty -three images in Explore
1. Rising through the trees, 2. Preaching to the choir, 3. Butterfly ~ 1, 4. Juggler, 5. Live Yard Ornament, 6. Hummingbird on Maltese Cross, 7. Mommy to be, 8. Bohemian Waxwing,
9. Cranberry slushy, 10. Snowflake, 11. Junco and Cedar hedge, 12. Sandhill cranes, 13. Trying to get a grip, 14. Tent with ocean view, 15. Weed control in Jasper Park, 16. Fawn,
17. Swaying perch, 18. Bohemian Waxwing, 19. Tree behind the moon, 20. Snow falling at night, 21. Winter fun!, 22. Happy Solstice!, 23. Masked berry picker, 24. Christmas card in the making?,
25. Cool seat, 26. Church in a desert, 27. Dragonfly, 28. Night reflections, 29. Found a Peanut, 30. Autumn visitor, 31. Red squirrel, 32. Gull Arguing,
33. Kamloops Lake, 34. Hummingbird 3, 35. Hummingbird 1, 36. 07:07:07:03:52, 37. Red squirrel having a look around, 38. Wheelies, 39. Spider in front of window, 40. Female Yellow Warbler on crabapple - 4,
41. Rain on the window, 42. Wilson's Warbler In crabapple tree 3 (cropped), 43. Robin
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
I'm sure most people have taken at least one photo of a Dandelion seedhead, lol. This one was taken down near Forgetmenot Pond on July 1st.
"Dandelions get provincial reprieve.
CBC News Posted: May 24, 2011 12:33 PM MT Last Updated: May 24, 2011 5:07 PM MT.
Calgarians who strive for a perfectly green lawn are losing a weapon in their never-ending battle against dandelions. A recently passed overhaul of the province's Weed Control Act saw the much detested yellow flowering plant removed from the list of noxious weeds. That means municipal bylaw officers will no longer be able to fine homeowners who let dandelions overtake their yards.
Officials in Calgary have more serious weed problems to tackle than dandelions anyway, according to Simon Wilkins, the city's pest management co-ordinator. "Not to discount people's interest in regular garden weeds but it's important to have a broader view and put everything in its context," said Wilkins. Wilkins said most of his department's resources are spent battling highly noxious invasive weeds.
.... Chris Neeser a weed specialist for Alberta Agriculture acknowledged that the dandelion is still a nuisance for grain farmers. But he said the ubiquitous weed is simply part of the Alberta landscape."
"While the dandelion is considered a weed by many gardeners, the plant does have several culinary and medicinal uses. The plant can be eaten cooked or raw and is used in soups or salads. Usually the young leaves and unopened buds are eaten raw in salads, while older leaves are cooked. Raw leaves have a slightly bitter taste. Dandelion flowers can be used to make dandelion wine. The leaves are high in vitamin A, vitamin C and iron, containing more iron than spinach. Ground roasted dandelion root can be used as a coffee substitute. It is believed to stimulate digestive functions. Sold in most health food stores for a variety of health benefits." From usagardener.com/disease_pests_and_weeds/weeds_and_weeding....
You either love 'em or hate 'em - I love 'em, so bright and cheery!
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Upland rice weeds / PORTULACACEAE (purslane family)
Weed Name: Portulaca oleracea L.
books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA3...
Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)
Key to any weed eradication program is preventing further spread. Volunteers and all teams working on hawkweed eradication follow hygeine protocols. This includes brushing down boots, gaiters, backpacks and work equipment to ensure the transportation of seeds and or pathogens is limited. Volunteers from the Canberra Bushwalking Club, in partnership with Greening Australia and the NPWS, under the Environmental Trust are searching for Mouse-ear hawkeed near the Strezlecki Creek catchment. Mouse-ear hawkweed is part of the Hawkweed Eradication Program in Kosciuszko National Park.
Photographer: Haydn Burgess (Greening Australia).
Upland rice weeds / POACEAE (grass family)
Weed name: lmperata cylindrica (L.) Raeuschel
books.google.com.ph/books/irri?id=tqRtCQ9WMLUC&pg=PA3...
Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)
COVER CROPS — Dr. Larry Steckel of the U of Tennssee Extension, discusses use of cover crops in weed control at Pigposium 3, held Feb. 28 2017, at East Arkansas Community College in Forrest City. (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Mary Hightower)
The 2009 National Tree Day was held at Rosherville Reserve in Mosman on Sunday 2 August with about 50 people taking part.
The tree planting area was on the southern side of the reserve up from the children’s playground in the vicinity of previous years' National Tree Days. The trees were provided by Mosman Council along with a free BBQ for all participants.
Schools Tree Day was held at the same location on Friday 31 July with approximately 100 students from year 1 and 2 at Middle Harbour Public School and Beauty Point Public School participating.
In total approximately 600 indigenous trees, shrubs and groundcovers were planted over the two tree planting days.
Prior to the planting days the area was subject to weed control using contract bush regenerators and the area was covered in mulch. There will be follow-up weed control and plant watering to help restore the site to natural bushland.
Want to help? Join our bushcare volunteers.
There are many reasons why companies need Business Irrigation Services in Lauderdale Lakes, FL and pumping services. For people living anywhere in the world, it is best to have a water pump and install it by an expert who knows what they are doing. The mistake many people make is to get these services from companies that don't have a good track record. Now you can save a little money by choosing unreliable companies, but you won’t get a product for more than a year or two. In contrast, professionally installed corporate and residential water tanks can be used for many years and require minimal maintenance during this period. So what kind of products and services does the irrigation service provide? Whether your agricultural, commercial or mining operations require water solutions, you can contact your irrigation service provider. In addition, you can get a complete list of pumps, accessories and piping when you need it. You can also complete the installation and on-site inspection. If repairs are needed, you can too, because the last thing you want is the main component of the water system failure.
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Tidy parks in Christchurch have trees, regularly mown lawns, and all edges regularly sprayed with herbicide. This doesn’t leave many options for wild things.
Philadelphia Landscaping provides the Delaware valley with the best landscaping services.These Include lawn care, residential landscaping, commercial landscaping, lawn mowing, sod installation, tree trimming, lawn sprinkler repair and weed control.
Invasive species of Ventenata indicated by light patches across upper fenceline. Twenty-acres to the right of fenceline were chemically treated for Ventenata, allowing native grasses an opportunity to develop and create a healthier pasture. Clay Gregory, landowner and Tribal member, participated in the ventenata control Targeted Implementation Plan. He chose to treat the infestation with aerial application of herbicide and grazing management. Crow Reservation, MT. June 2021.
Impatiens glandulifera, Himalayan balsam, is a large annual plant native to the Himalayas. Via human introduction it is now present across much of the Northern Hemisphere and is considered an invasive species in many areas. Uprooting or cutting the plants is an effective means of control.
In Europe, Himalayan balsam has been included since 2017 in the list of Invasive Alien Species of Union concern (the Union list). This implies that the species cannot be imported, cultivated, transported, commercialized, planted, or intentionally released into the environment in the whole of the European Union.
Etymology
The common names Himalayan balsam and kiss-me-on-the-mountain refer to the plant's native Himalayan mountains. Ornamental jewelweed refers to its cultivation as an ornamental plant.
The specific epithet glandulifera is a compound word from glándula meaning 'small gland', and ferre meaning 'to bear'.
Description
It typically grows to 1 to 2 m (3.3 to 6.6 ft) high, with a soft green or red-tinged stem, and lanceolate leaves 5 to 23 cm (2.0 to 9.1 in) long. The crushed foliage has a strong musty smell. Below the leaf stems the plant has glands that produce a sticky, sweet-smelling, and edible nectar. The flowers are pink, with a hooded shape, 3 to 4 cm (1+1⁄4 to 1+1⁄2 in) tall and 2 cm (3⁄4 in) broad; the flower shape has been compared to a policeman's helmet.
After flowering between June and October, the plant forms seed pods 2 to 3 cm (3⁄4 to 1+1⁄4 in) long and 8 mm broad (1⁄4 in), which explode when disturbed, scattering the seeds up to 7 metres (23 feet).
The green seed pods, seeds, young leaves and shoots are all edible. The flowers can be turned into a jam or parfait.
The plant was rated in first place for per day nectar production per flower in a UK plants survey conducted by the AgriLand project which is supported by the UK Insect Pollinators Initiative. However, when number of flowers per floral unit, flower abundance, and phenology were taken into account, it dropped out of the top ten for most nectar per unit cover per year, as did all plants that placed in the top ten for per-day nectar production per flower, with the exception of common comfrey (Symphytum officinale).
Distribution and habitat
Himalayan balsam is native to the Himalayas, specifically to the areas between Kashmir and Uttarakhand. In its native range it is usually found at altitudes between 2000 and 2500 m above sea level, although it has been reported at up to 4000 m above sea level.
In Europe the plant was first introduced into the United Kingdom by John Forbes Royle, professor of medicine at King's College, London who became Superintendent of the Botanic Gardens, Saharanpur, India. It has now become naturalized and widespread across riverbanks. At present it can be found almost everywhere across the continent.
In North America it has been found in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. In the United States it is found on both the east and west coast, seemingly restricted to northern latitudes.
In New Zealand it is sometimes found growing wild along riverbanks and wetlands.
Invasive species
Himalayan balsam is sometimes cultivated for its flowers. It is now widely established in other parts of the world (such as the British Isles and North America), in some cases becoming a weed. Its aggressive seed dispersal, coupled with high nectar production which attracts pollinators, often allows it to out-compete native plants. Himalayan balsam also promotes river bank erosion due to the plant dying back over winter, leaving the bank unprotected from flooding. Invasive Himalayan balsam can also adversely affect indigenous species by attracting pollinators (e.g. insects) at the expense of indigenous species. It is considered a "prohibited noxious weed" under the Alberta Weed Control Act 2010.
In the UK, the plant was first introduced in 1839, at the same time as giant hogweed and Japanese knotweed. These plants were all promoted at the time as having the virtues of "herculean proportions" and "splendid invasiveness" which meant that ordinary people could buy them for the cost of a packet of seeds to rival the expensive orchids grown in the greenhouses of the rich. Within ten years, however, Himalayan balsam had escaped from the confines of cultivation and begun to spread along the river systems of England.
It has now spread across most of the UK, and some local wildlife trusts organise "balsam bashing" events to help control the plant. However, a study by Hejda and Pyšek (2006) concluded that, in some circumstances, such efforts may cause more harm than good. Destroying riparian stands of Himalayan balsam can open up the habitat for more aggressive invasive plants such as Japanese knotweed and aid in seed dispersal by dropped seeds sticking to shoes. Riparian habitat is suboptimal for I. glandulifera, and spring or autumn flooding destroys seeds and plants. The research suggests that the best way to control the spread of riparian Himalayan balsam is to decrease eutrophication, thereby permitting the better-adapted local vegetation, that gets outgrown by the balsam on watercourses with high nutrient load, to rebound naturally. The researchers caution that their conclusions probably do not hold true for stands of the plant at forest edges and meadow habitats, where manual destruction is still the best approach.
The Bionic Control of Invasive Weeds project, in Wiesbaden, Germany, is trying to establish a self-sufficient means of conserving their local biodiversity by developing several food products made from the Himalayan balsam flowers. If all goes well, the project will have it financing its own eradication.
In August 2014, CABI released a rust fungus in Berkshire, Cornwall and Middlesex in the United Kingdom as part of field trials into the biological control of Himalayan balsam.
Some research also suggests that I. glandulifera may exhibit allelopathy, which means that it excretes toxins that negatively affect neighboring plants, thus increasing its competitive advantage.
The Royal Horticultural Society and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology recommend that pulling and cutting is the main method of non-chemical control, and usually the most appropriate. Natural Resources Wales has used manual methods, such as pulling plants and using strimmers, to largely eradicate Himalayan balsam from reaches of the River Ystwyth.
Tom and Jim hot and sweaty and in need of a rest after attempting to control rampant weed growth after the summer rains.
Portrait of Alex Edgardo Contreras, 39, showing canavalia pods in his banana plantation where he has planted canavalia cover crop to help restoration of soil through organic material that adds nutrients, keeping moisture in the soil and weed control in El Zunca, Atiquizaya, Ahuachapán, El Salvador. He is a producer that has adopted good agricultural practices promoted by Raíces Ahuachapán project.
Raíces Ahuachapán is a 12-year project that is restoring degraded landscapes—some 30,000 acres in El Salvador’s western department of Ahuachapán—while improving farm productivity and engaging local youth to become the next generation of leaders and land stewards. The loss of El Salvador’s fertile soil is at a critical juncture. The tiny Central American country is one of the most deforested countries in the hemisphere. Unsustainable farming practices have left three-quarters of its farmland so depleted it can’t retain water and vital nutrients. As a result, roughly 400,000 small farmers are struggling to grow enough food to feed their families and earn a decent living.
Raíces Ahuachapán is taking a comprehensive approach to revitalizing deteriorated farming landscapes and the services they provide. Working through partner institutions and local governments, the project promotes improved farming practices that help farmers manage soil and make efficient use of water so they can optimize their productivity while protecting communal water supplies. At the community level, the project brings together an array of local actors to partner in innovative projects that respond to the needs of the communities themselves. Through formal education, on-the-job training, and entrepreneurship, the project is positioning young people to become professionals and leaders in agriculture who share the goal of restoring the country’s landscapes.
Note: Raíces Ahuachapán is funded by the Howard G. Buffett Foundation. Any public-facing material that uses the project name requires the foundation’s approval. Please inquire via Robyn.Fieser@crs.org.
Photo:NPWS_Helicopter spot spray unit in use at on steep cliffs of Tomaree Headland, Tomaree National Park, Port Stephens.
04 AUG 2012: Danica Patrick, driver of the No. 7 GoDaddy.com Chevrolet, and Darrell Wallace Jr., driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, during the NASCAR Nationwide Series U.S. Cellular 250 presented by the Enlist Weed Control System fall race weekend at Iowa Speedway in Newton, Ia.
Forty two images in Explore, June 11, 2010.
1. Preaching to the choir, 2. Butterfly ~ 1, 3. Juggler, 4. Live Yard Ornament, 5. Hummingbird on Maltese Cross, 6. Mommy to be, 7. Bohemian Waxwing, 8. Cranberry slushy,
9. Snowflake, 10. Sandhill cranes, 11. Junco and Cedar hedge, 12. Trying to get a grip, 13. Tent with ocean view, 14. Weed control in Jasper Park, 15. Fawn, 16. Swaying perch,
17. Bohemian Waxwing, 18. Tree behind the moon, 19. Snow falling at night, 20. Winter fun!, 21. Happy Solstice!, 22. Masked berry picker, 23. Christmas card in the making?, 24. Cool seat,
25. Church in a desert, 26. Dragonfly, 27. Night reflections, 28. Found a Peanut, 29. Autumn visitor, 30. Red squirrel, 31. Gull Arguing, 32. Kamloops Lake,
33. Hummingbird 3, 34. Hummingbird 1, 35. 07:07:07:03:52, 36. Red squirrel having a look around, 37. Wheelies, 38. Spider in front of window, 39. Female Yellow Warbler on crabapple - 4, 40. Rain on the window,
41. Wilson's Warbler In crabapple tree 3 (cropped), 42. Robin
Created with fd's Flickr Toys
Dr. Russ Hahn leads the discussion about Kixor powered herbicides for weed control in corn.
Photo by Bethany Liebig
NEWTON, IA - AUGUST 3: during the NASCAR Nationwide Series U.S. Cellular 250 Presented by Enlist Weed Control System at Iowa Speedway on August 3, 2013 in Newton, Iowa. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images)
Aquascreen is for ponds and lakes with aquatic weeds problems. This textiles inhibits plants growth. Perfect for swimming areas, marinas, beaches, muck covered areas, shorelines... Eco friendly, no herbicides needed. canadianpond.ca/