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Last year I tilled up the bed, but they came back this year. Does anybody know anything that I can do to get rid of them without having to remove everything else and killing my flowers.
Thank you very much!

2007-04-02 03:02:55 · 7 answers · asked by Shannon R 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

7 answers

You have to pull them by hand....Well... one way to multiply them is to take a cross sectioned piece, as long as there is a piece of root attached and put it in dirt. essentially, That's what you did by tilling them under. 5 years ago my yard was FULL of them i pulled and pulled the first year, the second year was one quarter of the pulling. now it is hardly any pulling, just when i see a stray one come up here and there.alot of work, but worth it.

2007-04-02 03:31:41 · answer #1 · answered by T-pot 5 · 0 0

Who knew there became more advantageous to weeds than inflammation? seems, you are able to devour a number of them – as an celebration, those tiny onion bulbs and their chive-like leaves that very last month began to burst through the brown zoysia like Chia Pets lengthy gone loopy. They’re wild onions, and they’re waiting for harvest now. “the flavour is intense, a blend like garlicky chives,” suggested Nicola Macpherson, proprietor of Ozark woodland Mushrooms. “in case you mow over them, they smell like sparkling garlic. Very good.” Left to mature, the leaves strengthen to a correct of 18 to 20 inches, one stalk develops a handsome white seed flower and, because the seed head matures, the stalk bends over (as a effect the nickname nodding onion). Macpherson makes use of wild onions, both bulbs and leaves, in salads, soups and stews. Excerpt from Wild vegetables and herbs are ripe for the foraging • by technique of Pat Eby

2016-12-03 03:45:24 · answer #2 · answered by coury 4 · 0 0

you need lime your PH is too low.you can get a soil sample test done free with the agricultur dept in your loc town you can look up when to cut them down in march and april and they will bleed out and dye off but your PH in your dirt is very low and thats why the grow there add lime to the soil you can also eat them too if you like

2007-04-02 04:13:20 · answer #3 · answered by MrMike 3 · 0 0

As they get older, they will settle down and become good onions.

2007-04-04 05:48:13 · answer #4 · answered by bobsimpson1947 3 · 0 0

We have them, too. I haven't found any effective treatment other than just pulling them out.
Yuck.

2007-04-02 03:11:19 · answer #5 · answered by sylvyahr 3 · 0 0

Use God's greatest creation-your hand!

2007-04-02 03:24:31 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you can find the herbicide, with "Trimec" in it, that will work.

2007-04-02 04:28:07 · answer #7 · answered by won2many 2 · 0 0

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