Anonymous wrote:Vinegar and a little dish soap sprayed between the fence. I've tried the boiling water trick and it takes gallons of water and wasn't too effective. The vinegar on a hot summer day will bake those weeds ago in a couple of hours. Viney plants like ivy are much hard to take out though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what Roundup was made for. It will only kill the weeds/plants that you spray it on.
Yeah until it gets found in foods like cereal.
https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/12950444
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RoundUp is safer than boiling water.
Um no
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what Roundup was made for. It will only kill the weeds/plants that you spray it on.
Yeah until it gets found in foods like cereal.
https://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/12950444
Anonymous wrote:RoundUp is safer than boiling water.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to accomplish WITHOUT poisoning our groundwater. No poison chemicals for me.!! I have been using compost (previous cut grass) between the fences for past 20 yrs.Which has been working well for me!!!
NOW our city Ordinance Dept. calls this "blight".....and expect me to remove it. Where were they when my neighbor put their now rotted down wooden privacy fence next to my chain link fence - backwards. I know its the responsibility of the person putting up the privacy fence to maintain weed control .... I've been here 43 yrs. that house has seen owners come & go and now have renters .... NONE of those people ever 'weeded' that space between our fences. It was always left up to me. I started this after a couple trees tried growing between our fences. Now What do I do?
I'm actually the OP of this thread, I can't believe it popped up after three years. Given that you have a chain link fence that's probably 3.5-4 ft high (and thus can both reach over the top and have some access to the space between the fences, I would clean out the mess you made, put down some heavy-duty weed barrier between the fences, and then put a layer of landscaping rock (the ones around golf ball size) on top of it to secure the barrier and discourage new weeds on top.
OP, what did you end up doing with the situation in your yard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to accomplish WITHOUT poisoning our groundwater. No poison chemicals for me.!! I have been using compost (previous cut grass) between the fences for past 20 yrs.Which has been working well for me!!!
NOW our city Ordinance Dept. calls this "blight".....and expect me to remove it. Where were they when my neighbor put their now rotted down wooden privacy fence next to my chain link fence - backwards. I know its the responsibility of the person putting up the privacy fence to maintain weed control .... I've been here 43 yrs. that house has seen owners come & go and now have renters .... NONE of those people ever 'weeded' that space between our fences. It was always left up to me. I started this after a couple trees tried growing between our fences. Now What do I do?
I'm actually the OP of this thread, I can't believe it popped up after three years. Given that you have a chain link fence that's probably 3.5-4 ft high (and thus can both reach over the top and have some access to the space between the fences, I would clean out the mess you made, put down some heavy-duty weed barrier between the fences, and then put a layer of landscaping rock (the ones around golf ball size) on top of it to secure the barrier and discourage new weeds on top.
Anonymous wrote:I want to accomplish WITHOUT poisoning our groundwater. No poison chemicals for me.!! I have been using compost (previous cut grass) between the fences for past 20 yrs.Which has been working well for me!!!
NOW our city Ordinance Dept. calls this "blight".....and expect me to remove it. Where were they when my neighbor put their now rotted down wooden privacy fence next to my chain link fence - backwards. I know its the responsibility of the person putting up the privacy fence to maintain weed control .... I've been here 43 yrs. that house has seen owners come & go and now have renters .... NONE of those people ever 'weeded' that space between our fences. It was always left up to me. I started this after a couple trees tried growing between our fences. Now What do I do?
Anonymous wrote:This is what Roundup was made for. It will only kill the weeds/plants that you spray it on.