I would like to know this as well. |
Why get rid of milkweed? It's the only plant that supports monarch butterflies. |
No, it’s not. It’s the only plant upon which they can lay their eggs, but if there isn’t nectar all season long, then the monarchs aren’t supported at all. If you’re leaving some scraggly milkweed and not having any other nectar rich plants, preferably native plants for the right mix of protein and carbohydrates, you aren’t doing the monarchs, or any other endangered pollinator any favors. And if someone has a small yard? I have tons of milkweed and that stuff can be a beast. Not all varieties are attractive and as I pointed out it’s not necessary doing any good. |
| For the people kvetching about milkweed - post it on NextDoor. You'll have a stampede as people line up to take it off your hands. Yes, even the common milkweed. |
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So sorry OP: nightmares!
Could you try killing it by light deprivation? Heavy cardboard has worked for me. |
Not enforceable until January 1st. |
milkweed is edible, and supposedly really yummy. |
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ugh sounds awful
https://www.lewisginter.org/italian-arum/ maybe they hate it too? |
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Yes, it is horrible: http://mdinvasives.org/iotm/nov-2015/
Arum can ruin your property and gardens. Horribly invasive plant. |
| No, you can’t. I understand you feel strongly about invasive plants and native plants, and I do too, but the law is not aligned with your values on this. |
| I don’t love common milkweed but it’s not a beast. It’s much, much easier to eradicate if you want to than the really bad invasives. |
| If I'm the neighbor and OP is this aggressive about it, I'm pulling the arum and putting in a bamboo hedge on the property line |
Have fun getting fined out the wazoo by the govt. |
| Uh oh, I have that Italian Arum in a shaded area. Sounds like I have some digging to do. |
| I feel like you might have OCD OP. |