The Most Dangerous Plants You Should NEVER Buy from Nurseries

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
  • Welcome to Up to Something ! Today, we're going to talk about invasive plants that are commonly sold at nurseries, but could potentially wreak havoc on your garden and the environment.While these plants might seem attractive and exotic, they can quickly take over your yard and cause ecological damage that's difficult to undo. That's why it's crucial to be aware of the risks associated with planting invasive species and to avoid purchasing them if you are in an area where they can do damage.
    In this video, we'll show you the top invasive plants that you should never buy from nurseries, along with safe alternatives to choose instead. So, let's get started and protect our gardens from these dangerous invaders! Fortunately for this video and unfortunately for me: many of these plants are right in my backyard!Even sadder is that a few of my loves are on this list. Let's take a look.
    Update: This is an older video and the music is too loud. I apologize in a advance. I learned my lesson!
    #flowergarden #flowers #garden #gardener #gardenideas #gardenscapes #gardeningforbeginners #gardeningtips #gardeningmakesmehappy #perennialplants #spring #summer #bouquet #flowerfarming #backyard #backyardgardening #backyardgarden #garden
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @cindybrooks956
    @cindybrooks956 Год назад +955

    FYI: Music is SO loud it drowns you out for most of this video.

    • @803trends
      @803trends Год назад +39

      Truth!!!

    • @chloeuntrau4588
      @chloeuntrau4588 Год назад +12

      You do not miss much! lol

    • @maggiesgarden2234
      @maggiesgarden2234 Год назад +16

      agreed

    • @annemurphy9339
      @annemurphy9339 Год назад +73

      The music is in the foreground and her voice is background so it’s uncomfortable & annoying the whole time.

    • @Jade_902
      @Jade_902 Год назад +28

      Mute and turn on closed captions

  • @Leilah99
    @Leilah99 Год назад +37

    Turn OFF the horrible music...

    • @ericemmons3040
      @ericemmons3040 Год назад +3

      Or make it much softer, so it's not so distracting; but yes, off would be good, since we're trying to concentrate on the information being given. . .

    • @lindabuck2777
      @lindabuck2777 Год назад +1

      Or at least lower the volume please 😅🙏🏻❤️

  • @richardbenke9687
    @richardbenke9687 Год назад +9

    I’ve spent 23 years battling wisteria that a previous owner planted in the backyard. It’s beautiful, but it’s the most tenacious plant I’ve ever dealt with.

  • @bahba9247
    @bahba9247 Год назад +13

    1. English Ivy
    2. Ground Phlox
    3. Purple Loosestrife
    4. Burning Bush
    5. Butterfly Bush
    6. Wisteria
    7. Scotch Broom
    8. Bamboo

    • @megarth1
      @megarth1 6 месяцев назад +1

      And those are some of my favorites. Oh well, the neighbors will learn to love them.

  • @jannertfol
    @jannertfol Год назад +13

    One of the best non-invasive plants that give fantastic autumn colour (and other benefits as well) are blueberry bushes. The kind that grow to 4 feet tall, or so. Nice plants, with white flowers in spring, berries in summer, and the scarlet leaves in the autumn.

  • @irenehabes-quene2839
    @irenehabes-quene2839 Год назад +57

    I live in Europe and most of these plants are not considered invasive here, ( with the exception of bamboe, and English ivy) but we have very invasive plants here which are native to USA or elsewhere. Our rivers are being clogged up by aquarium plants that people dump into the water. Since the winters are mild they don’t freeze off anymore.
    Amongst the worst plants on land are: Fallopia japonica, Impatiens glandulifera, Heracleum mantegazzianum, Prunus serotina, the last being native to the USA and killing off diversity in our local forest’s undergrowth.
    It’s probably just bad practice to move plants out of their natural habitats.

    • @lindabuck2777
      @lindabuck2777 Год назад +2

      Seems EVERY country has been invaded. We travel we move we plant. I’ve never done that but personally I’d go with native wherever I am! Some I might know, but others I don’t and would be intrigued by. Late teens, early 20’S I worked for a historical preservationist-specialist rebuilder working with life threatening asbestos and lead. Plants were part of the process as well and he left that up to me! 😮I learned so much at the time about invasive. Some have changed; mostly same ol same ol too numerous to type! I cannot imagine why anyone would bring a plant these days not native, when there’s so much diversity and beauty in England wales and France! Apparently invasion is still continuing! I’m 68 now, I’ve worked for landscapers as well, including -again-a specialist in removal of the invasive! The English ivy was a big foul opponent in this one neighborhood. He found the mother plant did everything to destroy it yet didn’t succeed completely, diminished it yes but the original mother was in a plot not built on , so we had a meeting with all the blocks residents to keep it cut and trimmed as a collective. It worked-they got mad and finally trimmed and cut it died off lol. I found that out when I happened to deliver something to an old friend about ten yrs later and drove by the still vacant lot. Gone lol. So, they’re everywhere and I endeavor to remove any and all I come across in all my rentals-I’m poor lol own no house or property, but always plant flowers and veggies. Blessings!🙏🏻❤️

    • @unimpressed..
      @unimpressed.. Год назад +2

      Kudzu is a big problem in a number of states in US.
      I think I remember hearing it was from Asia originally

    • @billieblake6227
      @billieblake6227 9 месяцев назад +1

      We have plantain here that is called White Man's footsteps. I don't mind bc they are good, herbally speaking. Many of the plants found throughout America were brought here from Europe, but bc they are common weeds today, most people think they are native.

    • @megarth1
      @megarth1 6 месяцев назад

      In Eastern Colorado, anything that will grow is welcomed. Except maybe mullein and cactus.

    • @Saamniferu
      @Saamniferu Месяц назад

      Intrestingly we have prunus species from eurasia and they are super invasive here aswell!

  • @margaretcaine4219
    @margaretcaine4219 Год назад +15

    In Vietnam, bamboo is grown on purpose. It is used for everything possible: I’ve seen scaffolding, ladders, furniture, flooring, whole buildings, and even food for pigs and humans, as well as waterwheels and piping for irrigation. It is ridiculously versatile and the Vietnamese are very inventive in its use.

    • @johnliberty3647
      @johnliberty3647 Год назад +3

      I like bamboo so much for its utility that I find people battling bamboo and offer to remove it for free. I used it for chicken fencing, composting and even walk ways through mud. I had an issue with mud one year that was so bad I got stuck in it. I started laying down bamboo on the mud and walked on it. The bamboo sank into the mud but only an inch and it made the walkway hard enough to keep walking on it. Sure it’s a high maintenance plant but if someone has a use for it they will clear it just to use it

    • @6980869
      @6980869 11 месяцев назад +2

      @johnliberty3647 Clumping bamboo is a good type of it, as it doesnt sprout EVERYWHERE. It can kill off other strong species with strong root systems, as the clumping bamboo has got an even stronger root system. People in survival situations will be blessed, if they come across a grove of bamboo. We should all be so lucky/fortunate to stumble upon some when out in the bush. Versatile is the appropriate term for it, as Margaret Caine stated.

    • @colinrice6865
      @colinrice6865 3 месяца назад

      Stop calling native species invasive.

    • @leptir7110
      @leptir7110 2 месяца назад

      UZ POTOKE DA ,ALI BAMBUS SE ŠIRI POMOČU SJEMENA

    • @Salmiyaguy1
      @Salmiyaguy1 29 дней назад

      clumping bamboo is just fine. Running bamboo is what is invasive. some clarification is what's needed here.

  • @JeremyWertheimerScience
    @JeremyWertheimerScience Год назад +13

    Thank you for highlighting the dangers of invasive plants. Always plant native plants whenever possible

    • @chloeuntrau4588
      @chloeuntrau4588 Год назад

      Invasive plants are not always from elsewhere! every region has some!

    • @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013
      @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013 Год назад

      Some native plants are invasive, too.
      Just because a plant can be grown in the forest without issue doesn't mean it can't kill your garden and bring your house down.
      Don't forget: Plants are victims to native herbivores and other plants. If you don't have the correct competition for your native plant, the chances are it *will* take over.

  • @goaldilocks2800
    @goaldilocks2800 Год назад +3

    Thanks for so many alternatives to the invasive plants! I'm looking forward to future videos!

  • @BobLigget
    @BobLigget Год назад +210

    As the comments indicate, a little geographical context goes a long way! For example, here in the Salt Lake valley burning bush is sold everywhere and is not all invasive. I have two and can attest to that. I've seen wisteria grown as a tree here in many places and it's both beautiful and non-invasive. You suggested azaleas, but in our highly alkaline soil it simply won't live nor anything in that family. For a tree example, in my native Philadelphia area woods the Norway Maple is considered an invasive species, but they're recommended here as one of the best maples to grow. It does fine in our soil with zero self-propagation. Box Elder maples are another story! Thanks for the consciousness-raising, it's just that there's no universal advice.

    • @Salix631
      @Salix631 Год назад +20

      Agreed, it would be ideal if video makers, especially garden videos, would indicate on their thumbnail where the video is relevant for. Of course this could reduce the number of views so its not likely to happen, but it is so irritating to watch a video only to figure out half way through that it doesn't apply to your region. If you are not an experienced gardener you may not figure this out at all. Most of the information in this video is irrelevant for Europe, and apparently some parts of the US - likewise a similar video made in, say, the UK, could be wrong for most of the US or anywhere else.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Год назад +5

      I see it as a heads up. I am a gardener so I already know, but I'd simply look up each one to see if its listed for my state.

    • @jimmiller6704
      @jimmiller6704 Год назад +4

      "here in the Salt Lake valley burning bush is sold everywhere and is not all invasive."
      That may be but those fail to help many native bees or butterflies to reproduce.
      Native bees and butterflies are in decline, I feel like we need to stop with the overseas efforts in our gardens.

    • @yellowbird2157
      @yellowbird2157 Год назад

      Thank you!!!

    • @CCB249
      @CCB249 Год назад +11

      I would get an invasive plant and tree list from your state's master gardening program before planting any plant. Your comment "they are recommend as a tree to grow here" about the Norway Maple doesn't say who is doing the recommending. I would not listen to any recommendation from someone that isn't educated in horticulture. Anyone with a lawnmower can call themselves a landscaper.

  • @janegerard5604
    @janegerard5604 Год назад +12

    The best thing to do is study what is native to your area and to use those plants as much as possible. In addition to not having to deal with invasive plants that get out of control, generally speaking native plants require very little care after the first 1-2 years. I live in the Pacific Northwest and can attest that our native woods are full of ivy, blackberries and scotchbroom. And in my own yard I have a constant battle with those plants and creeping buttercup. I have mostly natives and use some perennials and annuals that I know will not cause problems.

  • @damienkurrin
    @damienkurrin Год назад +15

    My wife made the mistake of buying and planting trumpet vine, and we've been fighting those things ever since (20 years).

    • @150JMB
      @150JMB Год назад +1

      I share your frustration. My neighbor had one that grew over the entire garage. It was beautiful. Both the garage and the vine have been gone for years, and I'm still constantly digging out new shoots on my side of the fence.

    • @lynnschantz9185
      @lynnschantz9185 Год назад +1

      44 years ago we bought a farm and it had trumpet vine growing, I dislike trumpet vine. Every year I fight with the trumpet vine popping up.

    • @vaderladyl
      @vaderladyl Год назад

      Like here in Florida we have to fight the air potato vines.

    • @marthakratz7877
      @marthakratz7877 Год назад

      My parents bought one of those a long time ago and it got horribly out of control and it took years to eradicate.

    • @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013
      @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013 Год назад

      Ah. Was it wild trumpet vine? That's stuff is a pain to remove.
      There's quite a few ornamental, man-made species that are a lot slower and don't spread like that. Try having a look at those ones, instead.

  • @darntootin2006
    @darntootin2006 Год назад +24

    Do us a favor, lose the background "muzak". It's too loud and too annoying. It sounds like the crap you have to listen to when you are put on hold, it's painful.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +2

      Thanks for letting know! I agree. It sounded totally different on my computer but then when I watched it on RUclips I was shocked at how loud it was!

  • @donamurphy8182
    @donamurphy8182 Год назад +2

    It was interesting to hear about these problem plants and especially nice that you gave alternative plants for them! Just subscribed!

  • @nangel270
    @nangel270 Год назад

    Thank you for providing alternatives. Appreciated.

  • @pamelab1400
    @pamelab1400 Год назад +11

    your content was great but that music was too loud and not a good genre for your video.

  • @ekscentar1
    @ekscentar1 Год назад +7

    Hello to the new channel about plants. I appreciate every effort like this, because I love my garden. He is a legacy of my grandmother and mother, but I contributed a lot to his current appearance. Unfortunately, with the legacy garden, I also have some legacy invasive species that I can't seem to get rid of. I've been fighting my grandmother's useless Indian strawberry for decades, and there are some other low-lying creepers that spread by rhizomes. That's why I divided the garden into several separate zones, in one of which I mixed all these invasive, low species, but that zone is dominated by the beautiful vinca minor, so they can't even be seen from it. Given that this is a new channel to which I wish good luck, I would have two pieces of advice: first, instead of music, the background can be the sound of the garden itself, birdsong for example. Secondly, I would like to always highlight the scientific Latin names of the plants in question for easier international recognition. Good luck!

  • @Coco-zu9ob
    @Coco-zu9ob Год назад +17

    Why the music? It's too loud and distracting.

  • @daisylee298
    @daisylee298 Год назад

    Thank you for the heads up with solutions

  • @mariemcgrath8681
    @mariemcgrath8681 Год назад

    Lots of advice for new gardeners, thanks.

  • @PurfectRelaxation
    @PurfectRelaxation Год назад +6

    In my small town where I live in Oklahoma my neighborhood doesn’t so much struggle with people planting invasive species so much as tree saplings! Elm trees and maple tree saplings sprout up everywhere in my backyard and flower pots in the front yard! Lots of time spent weeding them out! I enjoyed the video!

    • @SheenaSpeaks
      @SheenaSpeaks Год назад

      3 words.
      Bradford.
      F#%!%&
      PEARS.
      Nasty, migraine fish/tree Franken plant. Lmfao
      I'm from ok too and that's the one I wanna take a flamethrower to every spring lol

    • @PurfectRelaxation
      @PurfectRelaxation Год назад

      @@user-qz3kh4bq7y lol 😉

  • @valeriedevereux5912
    @valeriedevereux5912 Год назад +7

    I moved to Indianapolis last year. My backyard had English ivy in the gardens around the house. Covering the chimney and trying to get into the house via the siding on the family room. I had it removed, but I still have to pull out new growth constantly. I planted forsythia, the moles, groundhogs or squirrels ate it.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +2

      It seems like a never ending battle!

    • @myladycasagrande863
      @myladycasagrande863 Год назад +1

      Hmmm... suppose I should go pull up the one random shoot of ivy that has started in my back yard. Probably came from somewhere in the neighborhood; it's popular as a ground cover here in West Michigan.

  • @cathysterling1237
    @cathysterling1237 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing and information. Now know a couple was gonna plant to ( again Thanks ) alternative. Looking forward to future videos 😊

  • @blondek767
    @blondek767 Год назад +1

    I planted a forsythia in my side yard a few years ago. I am training it to grow like a water fountain. It’s very lovely. I trim it to be symmetrical. I have a climbing rose bush I do the same to, letting it grow standing alone without a trellis, trimmed in early spring to then resemble a water fountain of roses in late spring. I have a 20 year old butterfly bush outside my side entrance. It came with the house and it’s a dam ‘hedge’. If I don’t trim it every week in summer, it would overtake the door and steps. I use the weed eater on it.

  • @jadestone8552
    @jadestone8552 Год назад +5

    I live in West Texas hot dry rocky and windy!!! I have tried a lot of these plants and none have survived.

  • @slydog7131
    @slydog7131 Год назад +6

    Very informative video and an important topic. I really like the alternatives you suggested. Thank you! Next time, you might consider lowering the volume of the music significantly.

  • @honeykin7890
    @honeykin7890 Год назад

    Appreciate this knowledge that I did not know! Video well done, lovely voice.

  • @karenmoe3848
    @karenmoe3848 Год назад +1

    Very interesting and informative. Now I read through some of the comments. I'm new to Florida so I will rely on local nurseries to guide me to native gardening.

  • @cordeliabuffy6419
    @cordeliabuffy6419 Год назад +5

    I love wisteria and grow it in front of my house to give me privacy . Worst plant I have here is Japanese Honeysuckle which grows al, through an old walk way, and some kind of thorny plant that grew near the old wash house. Both are constant battles to get rid of .

  • @Terri_Stauffer
    @Terri_Stauffer Год назад +9

    Japanese barberry is another highly invasive and taking over forest area by me. I left one that popped up in my backyard since the birds loved it, but then I learned and it was nightmare to remove. Butterfly bush I tried growing but just never makes it to next season. Was told burning bush was beautiful shrub that we should plant and it’s law here that sign must be posted about its invasive nature so I passed. Button bush and New Jersey Tea were better native alternatives I planted. Along with non native dabbled willow and lilac.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +2

      Hi Terri! Yes, I hear Japanese Barberry are very invasive. I don't have any experience with them (luckily). The others I have all in my yard, but were planted before we bought the property. For me, the worst in the ivy. You were right to pass on the burning bush.

  • @brendasears9650
    @brendasears9650 Год назад

    Great summary, thanks for the info!

  • @juliahelland6488
    @juliahelland6488 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this! 💯

  • @user-ju9wt7cy3z
    @user-ju9wt7cy3z Год назад +51

    Love your content, but your music is too loud and distracting.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +6

      Thanks for letting know! I agree. It sounded totally different on my computer but then when I watched it on RUclips I was shocked at how loud it was!

    • @drusilladana4184
      @drusilladana4184 Год назад +5

      Yeah, I turn the sound off & use subtitles on many posts because what is called music by many is just annoying noise for me!!

    • @mikeylorene
      @mikeylorene Год назад +4

      @@uptosomething6271 Music can be invasive, too!

  • @texasflood1295
    @texasflood1295 Год назад +7

    May I add Bradford Pear. Here in the Mid-South, it has spread everywhere.

    • @joanwood9480
      @joanwood9480 Год назад +3

      Bradford pear stink and as a fast grower they are a weak tree.

  • @virtualstockholm
    @virtualstockholm 11 месяцев назад

    Very interesting! Thank you for sharing 🌷👍🏻

  • @robinchristensen1657
    @robinchristensen1657 Год назад

    I live in 8b, SW Washington. Creeping Jenny used to an annual here but gradually became a Hardy perennial sometimes surviving though winter. It took over my garden area from little plants I planted on the end of my raised vegetable beds. Beautiful and works in fish tanks so I now keep it in pots at our new house. Not as bad as mint or lemon balm.
    Vinca is another one that nurseries sell her that can be invasive.

  • @melanieeaton3344
    @melanieeaton3344 Год назад +3

    Very good video!!! Cotoneaster is a huge problem on the Oregon coast where I live.

  • @bluejay3945
    @bluejay3945 Год назад +4

    The term invasive is relative and truly dependent on regional climatic conditions. State extension services do an amazing job of posting plants invasive for that particular region.
    In addition to plants you mentioned as well as others I would add the following:
    1. Ornithogalum .. Star if Bethlehem bulb. Should be banned.
    2. Houttuynia…a very colorful ground cover plant that is a culinary herb in Asia. Nearly impossible to get rid of . Will grow in water.
    3. My wife’s family 😂. Once established they will destroy your property

  • @Infrared1967
    @Infrared1967 Год назад

    Excellent heads up!!! Learned my lesson with Chameleon Plant.

  • @debk9889
    @debk9889 Год назад

    Very interesting, i like some of the video topics as I'm learning more about flowers, and planting for a beautiful, native yard. Thanks for the info. New subscriber!

  • @beth285
    @beth285 Год назад +18

    The background music in this video was invasive and made it difficult to hear. Too bad.

  • @broddr
    @broddr Год назад +8

    Blueberry bushes (all native to the US) are also great for vivid red leaves in the fall. And you (and the birds) get berries as a bonus.

  • @southerner66
    @southerner66 Год назад +27

    Chinese wisteria is like the monster in a horror movie that keeps coming back every time you think you've finally killed it. I've battled it for seven years, and I still get new sprouts coming up. It's extremely hard to kill.

    • @AmanSingh-wb5tp
      @AmanSingh-wb5tp Год назад +1

      I've planted it in the front yard. Many ppl here have wisteria (CA)

    • @trueamnisias
      @trueamnisias Год назад +6

      This is wrong, it all depends on the climate, in most places Wisteria is not a problem (or doesn't grow at all). As with anything, everything has it's time and it's place....

    • @misschriss6874
      @misschriss6874 Год назад +2

      Saaaaaame! I have tried everything to kill my wisteria, and it keeps coming right back.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Год назад

      Where? I'm in upstate NY. I love wisteria. I want one. You send it to me?😂

    • @southerner66
      @southerner66 Год назад +4

      @@trueamnisias Why would I lie? In the U.S. Southeast with a warm, damp climate, Chinese wisteria will grow like crazy. Maybe it won't in very dry places like California or very cold places like upstate New York, but here in the Southeast, it's exactly like I described. It spreads everywhere and girdles and kills the trees it climbs. If there's even a tiny sliver of living vine left, it will regenerate.

  • @graylor1
    @graylor1 Год назад +3

    My mother loved plants. She attempted to start Spanish moss here. Luckily that didn't take but the wisteria and English ivy certainly did. The oriental bittersweet just showed up one day--somebody somewhere must have bought a wreath and a bird must have eaten a berry. Then, of course, there is the neighbor who brought back this beautiful vine with lovely smelling purple flowers from vacation. Kudzu. Everywhere. They're all pretty in their way, but I don't buy vines of any kind and I remain mindful that even my mother refused to plant bamboo.

  • @arraine
    @arraine Год назад +3

    My hometown in northern CA has such a massive scotch broom problem that they have annual community events for removing it from roadsides and private property where the property owners have requested help.

    • @flyteoffancy
      @flyteoffancy Год назад +1

      Same here on Vancouver Island BC

  • @AK-lv1ko
    @AK-lv1ko Год назад +8

    Zone 5 here. Fighting buckthorn, honeysuckle, and teasel. However they are easy compared to the ground elder/ashweed that I'm fighting. I finally got it completely out of one bed area after 3 years. Still have much more to go. If any piece of leaf or piece of root is in the ground it will grow. Think you have it all up cover the area with weedmat it grows right through it. Insane stuff.

    • @sumdude4281
      @sumdude4281 Год назад +1

      Can confirm on Buckthorn. Zone 5 too. Stuff is terrible.

    • @haseo8244
      @haseo8244 Год назад +1

      Zone 4 too. Teasel is supposed to be coming to Midwest soon - both species.

  • @tomjensen618
    @tomjensen618 Год назад

    My 30 year old Japanese wisteria is one of my favorites. Yes you have to prune it back a couple of times a year but, it has the show of the year when it flowers in spring.

  • @susanmayfield
    @susanmayfield Год назад

    I live in the greater Denver area and I have Bell Flowers that have taken over my flower beds and they drop tons of seeds for each plant. Very invasive and they shade out everything as they grow about 3-4' tall. Plus, my neighbor has a Sumack Tree that starts new trees in my yard that grow a foot in a couple of weeks. I spend a couple of hours a month pulling these tree seedlings up, worst part is they smell like cat spray. When I first moved here, the former owners had planted a multicolored ivy plant on the chainlink fence, it sent out 20' runners that wanted to get into my house foundation and siding, plus the next door neighbors foundation and siding. It took me two years to get rid of it.

  • @rosemarymonty5399
    @rosemarymonty5399 Год назад +2

    We bought a property and when we finally moved in there was Ivy all the way up a 35 ft Cedar Tree. The thickness of the vine was bigger than my upper arm. I was not able to get to the top but I pulled as hard as I could and tore it off the tree from below and the rest of it dies off. It took a couple of days to get it dug up. The Queen Mother, when she invited people to Balmoral, expected them to help tearing the Ivy off the building.

  • @songsayswhat
    @songsayswhat Год назад +13

    There are all sorts of native alternatives to popular invasive plants. Eastern Wahoo is another burning bush alternative (in fact, both are from the Eunoymous (sp) family). Nurseries should be regulated more when it comes to the plants they sell. How great it would be if they'd self-regulate, but we know they won't. For instance, our wild redbuds here are slowly being pushed out by bradford pears.

    • @lindabuck2777
      @lindabuck2777 Год назад +3

      Oh for cryin …same in my last place! I berated them for it-loudly lol it was a busy Saturday so everyone heard me! Apparently some of them listened to my ‘why you shouldn’t sell these’ dissertation and some took it to heart. Word spread and WERENT selling them-owner had to concede. 🤔😄🙏🏻❤️

  • @jane2949
    @jane2949 2 месяца назад

    I lived in Maryland for many years and had burning bush, butterfly bushes and trumpet bush which you didnt mention but it was shooting out spouts everywhere. I now live in Tennessee and have honeysuckle.i have always loved it and did not realize that it was invasive. I cut it back every year but the smell is incredible! Thank you for all of the information you shared.

  • @kotobukijake7773
    @kotobukijake7773 Год назад +6

    This is a great primer on invasives, and I applaud the effort here. For the record, as a resident of the Mid-Atlantic I can say that Scotch broom is indeed a pest on the East Coast as well, and I know one particular roadside where a number are growing wild. I will have to disagree with using Forsythia as an alternative, as it is also an invasive to avoid, but arguably the lesser evil. As for your comments on butterfly bush, it is really better to avoid it altogether and plant an assortment of summer-flowering perennials; Buddleja has no American species and few native insects can feed on it, including butterflies, thus making it essentially a honey-trap. Also, as someone who has worked for years in the nursery industry, I must say you have far more faith than I do in Monrovia and Proven Winners, and I can state categorically that neither brand limits their offerings to "sterile" cultivars. Anyway, that's the short version of my two cents, but I'll say again that this is a FAR more important conversation than people realize, and thanks for taking the time to educate folks!

    • @tinaknutsen
      @tinaknutsen Год назад

      Just a tid bit: my great grandfather used to take the scotch broom and make 🧹 brooms out of it and sell them. Henceforth the name scotch broom.
      I am in zone 8b and it is up and down the freeway corridor/ fields in full bloom and my allergies go crazy .
      I have a Forsythia in my backyard and I plan to remove it as it looks straggly most of the time. I may put a statue in … less invasive and I won’t have to water or be concerned and it will provide 4 season interest 😊

    • @lindabuck2777
      @lindabuck2777 Год назад

      I agree with you on we all need education in plantings.🙏🏻❤️🤔

  • @dlebreton7888
    @dlebreton7888 Год назад +6

    I own a pair of clippers. If anything gets out of control, I can look after this.

  • @annham4136
    @annham4136 Год назад +8

    I think it is important to consider the invasive potential of plants and to suggest alternatives. Your first example, English Ivy, can't be replaced by Creeping Phlox, because Ivy is for shade and phlox is for sunny areas. A Lobelia groundcover with brilliant blue flowers grows very well and is not invasive.

    • @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013
      @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013 Год назад

      Yeah, English Ivy is for deep shade. Too much sun and that's when it becomes invasive

    • @marilynbridges8697
      @marilynbridges8697 Год назад +1

      In much of the US, lobelia is an annual, due to cold temperatures.

    • @annham4136
      @annham4136 Год назад

      @@marilynbridges8697 : I am in zone 6b and we have harsh winter weather. I have a wonderful groundcover that is a type of lobelia that spreads very sweetly, not aggressive and easy to remove.

  • @user-wj5yz2pw5t
    @user-wj5yz2pw5t Год назад +1

    I totally agree about the Wisteria, which my sister planted near the house without even knowing what she planted. It is so invasive that soon it was impossible to stop it. It spreads around both through the air with branches and with roots through the ground. I had to dig it out of the ground and transplant it 20 meters from the house. Greetings from Serbia.

  • @janiceyoung283
    @janiceyoung283 Год назад +3

    This is very interesting about invasive plants because one plant that is the worse and pops up all over my garden in Vermont zone 5a is spider wort I did buy and plant it 20 years ago not knowing its habit and still trying to get it out of my garden

  • @Sooz1234
    @Sooz1234 Год назад +7

    In our yard, Rose of Sharon we inherited from the previous owner is invasive- sending up new seedlings everywhere. Barberry as well. We are in Zone 6+ to 7.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад

      Yes, we have quite a few Rose of Sharon in our yard and I believe they all originated from my neighbors.

    • @jenica9705
      @jenica9705 Год назад +2

      I absolutely hate rose of Sharon if it's self seeding. It's the worst!

    • @gardeningjunkie2267
      @gardeningjunkie2267 Год назад +2

      Try cutting back hard and removing all flowers/seed pods in the fall, once it's stopped flowering. I did that and have had a total of one seedling show up where I used to have hundreds.

    • @andrewgraves4026
      @andrewgraves4026 Год назад +1

      I have a double-flowered one that’s sterile. Yay

  • @mariadegan1029
    @mariadegan1029 Год назад +3

    I totally agree about the BEAUTIFUL wisteria!! I Love it❤ but l KNOW it’s roots can be VERY invasive and damaging 😔 it’s a dilemma 🤔🤔🤔

    • @cherryfireice8216
      @cherryfireice8216 Год назад +1

      Plant in a big pot, with bricks underneath, and train to a small tree shape.

  • @irenesgardenandmore
    @irenesgardenandmore Год назад

    ❤ thanks for sharing ! Yes I have wisteria pretty bad in my 5 acres ! Arggg!

  • @judieahmed98
    @judieahmed98 Год назад

    I enjoyed the video. When I purchased my home, the garden was tightly grown with Lily of the Valley. I couldn’t get a shovel in. We had to remove it with a machine.

  • @gardenforbirds
    @gardenforbirds Год назад +3

    You can girdle that ivy by just cutting the vines at the base of the tree. Won’t kill it, but that should stop it from propagating I’m told! Thanks for the great video!

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +1

      Thanks so much for watching and for the lovely comment!

  • @jenn976
    @jenn976 Год назад +4

    There are different types of bamboo - some invasive, some not. Ask a the nursery. Arborvitae are way over-planted.

  • @homeplantsguide-to5xl
    @homeplantsguide-to5xl Год назад +2

    Thanks for the info.

  • @GeminiPeg
    @GeminiPeg Год назад +1

    Bamboo is indeed very invasive. My husband planted it and it is taking over! I’ve resorted to chemicals but will be fighting for some years to come.

  • @Rubiastraify
    @Rubiastraify Год назад +6

    I love wisteria, but I didn't know it was invasive! Wow--guess I'll settle for the silk version!
    Yes -- bamboo can be a real pain to get rid of once established--if planted near a home, the roots can penetrate underneath the foundation and wreak havoc. Keep it in a pot!

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Год назад +1

      Wisteria is fine in many places. Just Google it for your state. Some type of bamboo that grows near me is the worst. Ppl dig it out and lay down garbage bags, tarps, etc to smother it. It comes back anyway.

    • @darkshadowsx5949
      @darkshadowsx5949 Год назад

      bamboo rhizomes dont grow very deep. and you can easily contain it with a proper root barrier but most people are too stupid, cheap, and lazy to put a barrier in.
      if it goes under foundation then the foundation wasn't very deep. if it "wreaks havoc" because someone didn't use a proper root barrier they deserve it.
      also clumping bamboo roots are different from running bamboo and are non-invasive.

    • @concernedcitizen4031
      @concernedcitizen4031 Год назад

      Wisteria grows on trees beside roads in the south. Pretty but leave it be. It will take over.

    • @Sdravan
      @Sdravan Год назад

      You can keep wisteria, but with a few cautions. I’ve kept wisteria in planters for 30+ years in the south. Keep it in a pot, put that pot on concrete and trim back your long vines. Do not put this vines on a compost pile, they will root.

  • @barbaracranford527
    @barbaracranford527 Год назад +2

    English ivy can be an uninvited guest, spread by birds, but of all the plants mentioned, wisteria is by far the worst. Uninvited wisteria has bought done a row of cedar trees and has done its best to take over my yard. Here in Maryland, it loves the climate and can grow yards every year. It is a nightmare.

  • @st.johnschuckatuck8429
    @st.johnschuckatuck8429 Год назад +2

    It is helpful to start with a caveat - "In my region - these plants should be avoided" because what isn't appropriate for your region may be native in another.

  • @lurklingX
    @lurklingX Год назад

    *really* good, thanks!

  • @inthrutheoutdoor5849
    @inthrutheoutdoor5849 Год назад +7

    Here is NE PA, there isn't much the deer won't eat, but one is barberry. They grow anywhere, including the shade. Barberry has been linked to Lyme disease. In some areas, like mine, there may be a 90% increase in Lyme-disease-carrying ticks when compared to areas with native shrubs. I see many youtube gardeners adding these to their favorites list... ugh...

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад

      Yes, I am going to talk about that in my next video. Scientists believe that the increase in Lyme is directly linked to the Barberry.

    • @robertdesantis6205
      @robertdesantis6205 Год назад

      The birds loved the barberry bushes we inherited in PA, but they are extremely painful to prune. Terrible landscaping plant.

  • @gusmonster59
    @gusmonster59 Год назад +22

    The best to gardenscape your home is with native plants. They will grow well, need little attention (in most cases) and not threaten the native landscape. SO if you live in high heat/drought prone area, plant those types of plants. And as so many others have said - geographic location is VERY important to what is, or is not, invasive.

    • @chloeuntrau4588
      @chloeuntrau4588 Год назад

      Again native plants can be invasive! nothing to do with native or not native!

    • @wattnowchris
      @wattnowchris Год назад +4

      @@chloeuntrau4588natives can be aggressive. Aggressive growth does not always equate to invasive. Invasive is always non-native.

    • @lindabuck2777
      @lindabuck2777 Год назад +1

      @@wattnowchris salient point! I love definitions! 🙏🏻❤️🤔

  • @RAMPHD
    @RAMPHD Год назад

    I too planted the “burning bush “ my neighbor, who is president of the local garden club informed of this invasive nature. I dug out a 4-5 foot plant. Add, Japanese Barbary plant! They are everywhere in my woods! I burned and dug out three of them in my side wooded area in my sideyard. They are wicked to dig up!

  • @wwtv361
    @wwtv361 Год назад +1

    My neighbor's wisteria is over 12' tall. Its vines grow into our trees, and come through the fence while pushing it over. We just keep trimming it back, but my fantasy is spraying it with Round Up.

  • @darkgardener9577
    @darkgardener9577 Год назад +20

    Wisteria is a favorite of mine, I have a few different varieties, but I keep them in pots that are not allowed on the ground. I get to enjoy a great spring show and avoid the nightmare of an invasive vine turned loose. So if you enjoy a particular plant don't totally write it off, there might be a responsible way to keep it.

    • @DaForceofNature
      @DaForceofNature Год назад +3

      I have wisteria in a pot too!!

    • @niccoloreiss842
      @niccoloreiss842 Год назад +3

      I keep wisteria as well. I don’t keep it in a pot tho, I planted it and pruned it into a tree. Now I super super aggressively prune the thing so that it doesn’t grow out of control at all. I prune it every 3 to 6 months. Sometimes I prune so aggressively I shock it into another bloom, but for the most part it’s healthy and it definitely doesn’t cause any issues since I’m so attentive to it. It would definitely turn into a nightmare if I ever moved tho so I talked to an arborist and figured out how to remove it if I ever moved so that the next owners don’t have to babysit it, the arborist said with how/where I planted it and how I prune it that it would actually be easy to just cut down and then uproot if needed. Some of these plants actually won’t be an issue at all if you rly babysit them like wisteria or burning bush, but others like butterfly bush or bamboo just cause too many issues (unless the plant is sterile in the case of some forms of butterfly bush) because of how it spreads.

    • @bicaroyoda4686
      @bicaroyoda4686 Год назад

      I had wisteria but after a while, I got better. With the poor soil in my garden, it kept to itself around a gazebo. The flowers and aroma were stunning in spring/summer. Borganvillia around here goes crazy. Although it has striking red flowers it also has very sharp thorns.

  • @Sludgedragon
    @Sludgedragon Год назад +1

    I have nothing but good memories of wisteria. Our house in the Bay Area came with three mature wisterias that didn't go where they didn't belong. However, they were right under a live oak tree, which they climbed way up into. It was so cool to have the only oak tree with flowers!

    • @tinaknutsen
      @tinaknutsen Год назад +1

      I planted one in my brother’s backyard because I thought it was pretty but didn’t know it was invasive.
      By the way it growing up your oak tree is why it is invasive… it chokes out the tree. The roots will damage underground pipes.
      I didn’t know any of that and thought it would look pretty in his backyard…plus they only bloom here in the spring…..regret regret and more regret! Now my brother doesn’t trust me to plant anything in his yard 😢
      PNW zone 8b

    • @Sludgedragon
      @Sludgedragon Год назад

      @@tinaknutsen Both the wisteria and the gigantic oak tree were fine and healthy for 30 years. The wisterias were in the middle of the yard and I don't think there were any problems. Don't know if the current owners did anything about the wisteria plants, though.

    • @reavanante2160
      @reavanante2160 Год назад +1

      There are different Wysterias, they have different growth patterns and tolerances.

  • @debbieholfeld-xc3os
    @debbieholfeld-xc3os Год назад

    I have had so much trouble with Japanese Knot weed and buttercup in my yard and gardens! It never ends!! Vancouver Island BC Canada

  • @heathergarrett9836
    @heathergarrett9836 Год назад +3

    Living in Northern California , We call Scotch Broom Tick Bushes ! Ride your horse thru fast , still covered in ticks . Especially the lead horse and lighter colored . Then hose them down , and neem spray . And jump in the shower !

  • @MrPedur
    @MrPedur Год назад +3

    An absolutely fantastic video - the music was possibly a little low. I heard a voice, which I don't think was meant to be.

  • @joannpilgrim1425
    @joannpilgrim1425 Год назад

    Very informative.

  • @pongop
    @pongop Год назад

    Great video! Thank you for the tips, from another 90s teen!

  • @sandywhite1550
    @sandywhite1550 Год назад +2

    Creeping Charlie ground cover in the mint family is a nightmare. It will grow into your grass and is hard to remove. Keep it in a contained area.

  • @kristijensen7457
    @kristijensen7457 Год назад +2

    Bamboo comes in two growing styles. There is “running” bamboo that is invasive but the “clumping” bamboo is relatively safe.

  • @pamelawing5747
    @pamelawing5747 Год назад +1

    Love my Clematis and it hasn't invaded anything and I've had it for years.

  • @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui
    @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui Год назад

    Ivy does smother treas and crack bricks. Here in UK I cut it at the bottom, then it just dies and falls down . Someone brought a budlia plant here some years back , now its everywhere esp in places where nobody gardens ie at the sides of railways etc. Thank you for the video. ❤

  • @bethellingworth7814
    @bethellingworth7814 Год назад +14

    I learnt when I was child that a plant which is a weed in one area, can be a plant which has to be cherished and coaxed in another place. ( This was morning glory - a weed in Cape Town and special in Zimbabwe) I think it’s strange that you haven’t even said which zone you are in the United States. Where I live Tasmania -Wisteria is beautiful and not a problem. Perhaps you haven’t had the opportunity to garden in other areas than your own. There are many kinds of bamboo, some are running and some are clumping. The running are much more invasive. Nice program. Just it would be good to know your zone. Thanks.

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +1

      That is a good point! I am in zone 7 of the US. I live in the north east.

  • @davidshi6861
    @davidshi6861 Год назад +3

    invasive or not often depends on the USDA hardiness zone. Many of these are problems for my zone 5.

  • @deborahklinlger8565
    @deborahklinlger8565 Год назад

    GREAT VIDEO .

  • @sarameitner6770
    @sarameitner6770 Год назад +1

    Where I live, lilacs are also very invasive. They can take over areas very quickly.

  • @shawnplowman7924
    @shawnplowman7924 Год назад +6

    Mexican Evening Primrose is a major garden thug! One six pack has now invaded the garden of at least 8 of my neighbors. Also it sprouted and grew in the pipes of my bathroom and caused thousands of dollars of damage!!!

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +1

      That is terrible. I am so sorry to hear that. I hope that your insurance will cover it.

    • @shawnplowman7924
      @shawnplowman7924 Год назад +1

      Insurance refused to pay. I see people with Mexican Evening Primrose in their carts I tell them to put it back. It’s also one of those rare plants that can’t be killed with any chemical. To me it’s the little house of horror plant.

  • @goblinb
    @goblinb Год назад +26

    In the neighborhood I grew up in in Illinois, our neighbor had two burning bushes on each side of the front entrance. I never saw burning bushes pop up anywhere in the vicinity, or anywhere else for that matter. It surprised me to find out previously that burning bush is invasive.

    • @coolnatkat
      @coolnatkat Год назад +2

      Well, they are!

    • @sumdude4281
      @sumdude4281 Год назад +3

      Got two in front of my house in Ill. and no issues (thus far). 5 years, about chest high, same size etc. since we moved in. Maybe a bit taller...

    • @pamelah6431
      @pamelah6431 Год назад +3

      I also live in IL. Just because it isn't spreading in your yard does not mean it's not spreading via birds eating and pooping out the seed (which gives them gut rot besides). I am a professional gardener and do see it popping up where it doesn't belong.

    • @zztopwater8568
      @zztopwater8568 Год назад

      They are everywhere! Look at vacant property, fields, etc. The Bradford Pears and Burning Bushes are taking over.

    • @lilys4960
      @lilys4960 Год назад +4

      Mine wasn't invasive until I tried to remove it. I ended up with new plants springing up from the roots I did not get up. Ten years later I am still fighting off new growth.

  • @LoriJones-bp4uh
    @LoriJones-bp4uh 4 месяца назад

    Sadly… ivy was planted previously at my home. I appreciate knowing what is invasive.

  • @masbsk0112
    @masbsk0112 Год назад

    This is a very beautiful video I really like it

  • @freewoman4434
    @freewoman4434 Год назад +73

    As others have said, there are different types of bamboo. Clumping bamboo (eg. fargesia rufa, in fact all the fargesia family) are clumping, therefore not at all invasive. I have had several in my garden for about eight years and have had no problems. Also, all the plants (that I recognise) in this video are not invasive in other countries. I'm in the UK and none of those are regarded as invasive over here.

    • @OfftoShambala
      @OfftoShambala Год назад +4

      Yep… a lot of ‘invasive’stuff is great for the desert area and not problematic… but it’s all situational

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад +7

      Very true! It all depends on your location!

    • @CrazySexyDutchYessss
      @CrazySexyDutchYessss Год назад +1

      In the UK, pheasantberry, buddleai, crocosmia, snowberry, portugese laurel, cottoneaster and rhododendron are spreading outside gardens so best to be careful with those if you are near a forest / protected areas. Lots of them spreading in Belfast and rhododendron / laurel is very hard to kill as well.

    • @pattic.9376
      @pattic.9376 Год назад +10

      @@uptosomething6271 regardless, if it isn't native, it isn't supporting the ecosystem: wildlife, pollinators, etc., more likely displacing valuable native plants.

    • @rosemarysigur2007
      @rosemarysigur2007 Год назад +7

      I live in Louisiana and have a friend who had clumping bamboo. It isn’t invasive here either. A friend had some lining her fence. After a few years they decided to plant something else. They were able to remove all of it completely. Some states have laws against regular bamboo because it is so invasive. You can plant it but if it encroaches onto your neighbor’s yard you are liable for damages.

  • @vickigonya9432
    @vickigonya9432 Год назад +3

    Privet hedges. I trimmed mine into topiaries, butbi have to stay on top of it!!

    • @uptosomething6271
      @uptosomething6271  Год назад

      Yes! I am going to talk about privet in my next video. I love it and the smell always reminds me of summer!

    • @sarco64
      @sarco64 Год назад

      Privet is a huge problem in western Pennsylvania. Birds eat the berries and poop out the seeds in parks and forest preserves, where it out-competes native plants. There are some newer cultivars of privet which are sterile. If you want to plant privet, look for one of these non-flowering cultivars such as golden ticket or sunshine.

  • @mattellemorgan2710
    @mattellemorgan2710 Год назад

    I had planted a yellow native perennial that my local greenhouse sold me. It got 12-16 inches tall. Took over my whole bed. Has taken me 3 years to finally stop it. It looked like a yellow daisy. Blooms in early spring. Fluffy seeds that went everywhere each year. Roots that ran. Even dried out the moisture in the bed. Not sure if the name. 9:43

  • @youbetcha108
    @youbetcha108 Год назад

    Well done!

  • @jamesneville2746
    @jamesneville2746 Год назад +19

    When I moved to my first house in Vancouver, BC, I made an effort to plant mainly native species, though I left some beautiful shrubs planted by previous owners, including a pieris and a Japanese maple. (I totally eradicated the English ivy and wisteria, though it took considerable effort. One native species I chose for groundcover was Oregon wood-sorel (Oxalis oregana), partly because it resembles a shamrock, and my Mother was Irish. Little did I know that the few I planted absolutely went nuts and were tolerant of both sun and shade, choking out a lot of other herbaceous plants and low shrubs. Beware of using native plant species outside their natural habitat.

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 Год назад

      If it's outside of its natural habitat, it's not a native species. And just because it's native doesn't mean it's not aggressive.

    • @jamesneville2746
      @jamesneville2746 Год назад

      @@pendlera2959 A native species is one whose natural range includes a given location. For example, Douglas fir trees to not grow in bogs, but that bog may be within the natural range of that tree. The same goes for cities. Yes, the city is an unnatural habitat, but still within the range. Usually people couple the terms "invasive" and "exotic", but that is not always the case.

    • @lizmil
      @lizmil Год назад

      I also had that experience with wood sorrel which took over my small garden in just a couple of growing seasons.

    • @joyceobeys6818
      @joyceobeys6818 Год назад

      Just for info: Sorrel is amazing for diet, it has vitamin C and many things we could eat if something happened to the food.

    • @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013
      @sandy_carpetsthesecond5013 Год назад

      ​@@pendlera2959I live in England. English Ivy is invasive here unless it's grown in deep shade.

  • @DrGayleDelaneyDreams
    @DrGayleDelaneyDreams Год назад +3

    Thank you, MS. Up to Something! I wish you could have an outline of the invasive and alternative plants in the Program notes! AND perhaps a map code of Garden Zones for each alternative. 9B is our zone in central Florida! When we lived for 30myears in Mill Valley, California, We had two very selfish neighbors who ignored all warnings about planting Bamboo Which not only dramatically increased wildfire risk for our entire town, it invaded our yard from both sides, kept popping up, and ran to our foundation! We would have had to sue them eventually! How I miss Lilacs from my early years in New Jersey, sadly they apparently need cold winters to creat etheir dreamy scent. Are there any new cultivars that can stand 9B zones?

  • @christineloeb3180
    @christineloeb3180 Год назад

    Great info!

  • @KathyFitz1113
    @KathyFitz1113 Год назад +2

    Oriental Bittersweet! It was planted in my neighborhood +/- 40 years ago for the attractive orange berries used in fall decor. It’s a nightmare that we’ve all been fighting ever since!

  • @gardeningjunkie2267
    @gardeningjunkie2267 Год назад +7

    I would use a lilac instead of wisteria and get a beautiful clematis if I wanted a climber. I have many clematis in my yard and they are definitely not of the invasive variety.

    • @haseo8244
      @haseo8244 Год назад

      One large flower white species I think is C. Florida seed itself in zone 4 along with several bush species too.

    • @marthakratz7877
      @marthakratz7877 Год назад

      Steer clear of the Clematis variety with small white flowers that are supposed to be fragrant. They are horribly invasive with runners underground that go Everywhere.