my first Red Hawaiian turmeric harvest 🫚

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my first Red Hawaiian turmeric harvest 🫚

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Japanese knotweed, a highly invasive, fast-growing, and hardy plant
Parts of the UK are on high alert for signs of Japanese knotweed, a highly invasive, fast-growing, and hardy plant that can cause all kinds of problems for property owners.
It creates strong and far-reaching rhizomes, or stems, that can damage a home’s foundation and crack pipes.
Removal can take years and cost thousands of dollars, and that's on top of the cost to repair any associated structural damage. In some parts of Canada, like B.C., homeowners are legally obligated to remove Japanese knotweed if it is discovered on their property.
Mild weather and lots of rain in the UK this time of year have caused the plant to start sprouting, and in the right conditions, it can grow up to 10 centimetres per day.
A flowering Japanese knotweed. (W. Carter/Wikipedia) CC0.
Not so fast, Canada
Unfortunately, Canada isn’t in the clear: Our Japanese knotweed usually starts growing in late March or April, fueled by mild weather and heavy spring rainfall.
Japanese knotweed stems are reddish-purple. ( Ancatdubh43/Wikipedia) Public domain.
Japanese knotweed is considered more widespread and damaging in the UK, but the Knotweed Lab says if mitigation efforts don’t step up, Canada could be peering into its future.
“If this problem is left unchanged, Canada might face the same consequences as Britain,” the lab writes.
Japanese knotweed was introduced to North America in the 1800s as an ornamental plant and to help control erosion. Today, it is established in B.C. and from Ontario to Newfoundland.
The 'worst'
The structural damage, fast spread, and difficulty to eradicate are just some of the reasons the Knotweed Lab called this the “world’s worst plant”.
In addition to the UK, mainland Europe, and North America, Japanese knotweed has also infiltrated Australia. In 1999, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) added it to its list of 100 worst invasive plants.
The problem with Japanese knotweed
Japanese knotweed outcompetes native plants, damages wetlands, and reduces natural habitat space for animals.
Its root system is strong enough to tear through foundations, siding, pipes, asphalt, and concrete, and it’s extremely hardy, known to survive floods and re-colonize an area if removal efforts aren’t persistent.
Identifying Japanese knotweed
If left undisturbed, Japanese knotweed can grow up to 3 metres in height.
It has a bamboo-like appearance, but the stems are round and reddish-purple, while the leaves have a flat base with pointed tips and greenish-white flowers.
It is illegal to buy, sell, plant, or transport Japanese knotweed in many parts of Canada.
The most effective way to attempt self-removal is through targeted and repeated applications of herbicides over many years, as advised by Ontario Invasive Plants. Digging it up can unintentionally spread the plant, and simply cutting it is insufficient since its rhizomes extend widely underground.
Here's an example of what Japanese knotweed looks like in the spring as it starts to sprout. (Swale Crouch/Wikipedia) CC BY-SA 4.0
Knotweed Services UK
Just eat it? Don’t try that in Canada
In Japan, its shoots are foraged in the spring and eaten, and contain several vitamins and minerals, not unlike bamboo. But the knotweed is native to Japan. Here in Canada, foraging for plants isn’t recommended or, in some places, allowed.
Foraging for a plant counts as transporting it, which is prohibited in many Canadian regions. Also, because removal takes several years, you may be ingesting something that has been repeatedly injected with dangerous herbicides.
Eradication can take several years. Experts say catching it early is best.
Ginger is a type of horseradish similar to Wasabi.
Exemples de reproduction végétale dans les plantes : Tubercule, Rhizome et Stolon. La reproduction végétative est une méthode asexuée utilisée par de nombreuses plantes pour se propager sans avoir besoin de graines.
✅ Les tubercules, comme dans les pommes de terre, sont des réserves souterraines agrandies qui stockent les nutriments et peuvent générer de nouvelles plantes à partir de leurs bourgeons.
✅ Les rhizomes, comme chez le lys, sont des tiges souterraines horizontales qui poussent et forment de nouvelles plantes à différents endroits.
✅ Les stolons, comme dans la fraise, sont des tiges rampantes qui s'étalent à la surface du sol, générant de nouvelles plantes là où les racines se forment.
Ces mécanismes assurent non seulement la survie des espèces dans leur habitat, mais permettent également aux agriculteurs et aux producteurs de tirer parti de techniques de propagation efficaces pour obtenir de nouvelles plantes de manière plus contrôlée et rapide. 🌿🌍

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No one is coming to save us. Engage in collaborative niche construction at human scale.
No one is coming to save us. We have to save ourselves. Rebuilding The Village – Google Docs What should we do to survive the current state of the world? “Engage in collaborative niche construction at human scale.” The human capacity for language would not have given us any adaptive ecological advantage if it did not primarily serve the purpose of improving our ability to understand, trust,…
Made this root beast for Turnip 28 out of a plastic donkey, dinosaurs bits, a toy palm tree and milliput. I’m thinking he might be part of the fungivorous herd cult.
Tea Time: Fireweed
lf you’ve seen one fireweed, you’ve probably seen several. As an early successional species, growing in large numbers across a vast amount of space is kind of its thing. Any disturbance that leaves bare ground in its wake, such as a wildfire or a windstorm, gives fireweed the opportunity to colonize. It grows quickly and spreads via rhizomes, producing thousands of airborne seeds in the process,…
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