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What is the toughest plant is your neck of the woods? Login/Join 
Oriental Redneck
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Around here, it's the Bougainvillea, commonly known as the paper flower plant. We planted this many years ago. It's been through all kinds of shit (extreme cold, extreme heat, severe drought). I don't even water it. It doesn't die but keeps blooming every year. It's nice when blooming, but I hate it when it's time for trimming/cleaning for winter because of the freaky long thorns. They're much worse than rose thorns.

The crape myrtle is tough, but it got nothing on this plant.




What is the toughest plant is your neck of the woods?


Q






 
Posts: 30970 | Location: TEXAS | Registered: September 04, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
The Unmanned Writer
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We have one of those in our backyard. Never get watered (except by SoCal rain)

It gets cut back every other, every third year.

Wife, neighbor (it grows over the 6’ fence), and birds love it…. I call it the "thorn bush."

I’m also responsible for cutting it back…






Life moves pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.



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The definition of the words we used, carry a meaning of their own...



 
Posts: 14926 | Location: It was CA., Now it's "FREEEEEEDOM!!" (TN) | Registered: March 22, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Thank you
Very little
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Those are great looking plant but we have the toughest plant in the world, the Saw Palmetto.

You cannot kill these plants without going full on nuclear, they drink round up for breakfast and cooper sulfate for an aperitif.

10 or so years ago we had a huge fire in CFL, took out thousands of acres, trees, homes, cars, all gone, the leaves on these plants, gone the stalks, black as coal from the fire.

A few weeks after, they had green shoots coming out, yes, 2000 degree wild fire and they flipped the bird at it and were the only things coming back.

To get rid of mine took digging them out and covering them with 8 inches of soil topped by nice thick sod, and they still tried to come back... Had to keep cutting the shoots back for a year before they quit, I'm convinced if we tried to put a planter in the area they'd come back 25 years later...

Cock-a-roach's and Saw Palmettos will be left after the dooms day bombs are dropped...

 
Posts: 27624 | Location: Gunshine State | Registered: November 07, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
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Elephant Ears
Can. Not. Kill.




The Enemy's gate is down.
 
Posts: 18512 | Location: Spring, TX | Registered: July 11, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Optimistic Cynic
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Bamboo for the win, followed closely by English Ivy.
 
Posts: 7922 | Location: NoVA | Registered: July 22, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Savor the limelight
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Brazilian pepper, saw palmetto, bougainvillea in that order.
 
Posts: 14372 | Location: SWFL | Registered: October 10, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Fighting the good fight
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Crabgrass. If you don't apply pre-emergent to prevent it, it'll totally take over your yard, and nothing will touch it.
 
Posts: 35203 | Location: Northwest Arkansas | Registered: January 06, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
A Grateful American
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Giant Chinese wood bamboo.
About one acre stand.
70 feet high.
Runners like Hamas tunnels in Gaza.
At night, I can hear Charlie.

I am thinking napalm...

I just need to get out of the boat.




"the meaning of life, is to give life meaning" Ani Yehudi אני יהודי Le'olam lo shuv לעולם לא עוד
 
Posts: 46419 | Location: Box 1663 Santa Fe, New Mexico | Registered: December 20, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
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So many choices, I'll go with wild honeysuckle or the only tree that needs regular mowing -- the tree of heaven (stink trees). Mad




Set the controls for the heart of the Sun.
 
Posts: 9192 | Location: Flown-over country | Registered: December 25, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Not really from Vienna
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Mesquite.
 
Posts: 27697 | Location: SW of Hovey, Texas | Registered: January 30, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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quote:
Originally posted by architect:
Bamboo for the win, followed closely by English Ivy.


Yep, even here in drought central.
 
Posts: 3856 | Location: Texas Hill Country | Registered: July 24, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
His diet consists of black
coffee, and sarcasm.
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In my former necks of the woods, there were:

Central Valley of CA: Tribulus terrestris, aka "puncture vines" (as we called them), goat heads, etc. It proliferates in that area's >100° summer heat with no rain and does a number on bicycle tires, thin-soled footwear and bare feet. The offending thorns are its flowers.

Mojave Desert of CA: Tamarix, aka tamarisk or salt cedar. It can grow in soil so saline or alkaline that nothing else can.





"The Almighty, He put some livin' things on this earth so a man can eat." - Festus Haggen, Gunsmoke
 
Posts: 31579 | Location: Johnson City, TN | Registered: April 28, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Bamboo. Neighbor(now deceased} planted it on the property line. Constantly invaded my property. Must not have seen enough in Vietnam.
 
Posts: 18748 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Hard to pick one, but the Tag Alder is a tough customer.


End of Earth: 2 Miles
Upper Peninsula: 4 Miles
 
Posts: 17710 | Location: Marquette MI | Registered: July 08, 2014Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Cholla cactus.


_________________________________________________________________________
“A man’s treatment of a dog is no indication of the man’s nature, but his treatment of a cat is. It is the crucial test. None but the humane treat a cat well.”
-- Mark Twain, 1902
 
Posts: 10381 | Location: Northern Virginia | Registered: November 04, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Cogito Ergo Sum
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Yuccas in the desert southwest.
 
Posts: 6068 | Registered: August 01, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Legalize the Constitution
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I can’t think of one I think is really tough in this part of Wyoming. Going back to my years in the Arizona desert, i’d say creosote. Remarkable. During prolonged drought, not uncommon in the Sonoran, it will sacrifice branches so that the plant lives on. When precip comes, it grows the branches back.


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despite them
 
Posts: 14747 | Location: Wyoming | Registered: January 10, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Optimistic Cynic
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quote:
Originally posted by RogueJSK:
Crabgrass. If you don't apply pre-emergent to prevent it, it'll totally take over your yard, and nothing will touch it.
You obviously don't have the Japanese Stilt Grass in your neck of the woods (yet). Hey crabgrass, hold my beer!
 
Posts: 7922 | Location: NoVA | Registered: July 22, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Ammoholic
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Maybe poison oak around here.

Veldt grass is pretty tough too. Initially imported by the SCS (Soil Conservation Service, a predecessor to the NRCS, National Resource Conservation Service), it is now viewed as an invasive weed…
 
Posts: 7780 | Location: Lost, but making time. | Registered: February 23, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Drill Here, Drill Now
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I have sweet viburnum that my builder planted in front landscaping way too close to the hollies and boxwoods. I've flush cut it with the ground twice with a chainsaw, but if I don't stay on top of trimming it then it'll be back to height of eaves in a year or two.

The first time I cut it was after winter storm Uri. I kept cutting lower and lower looking for it to be alive, and I finally found all 360 degrees of cambium being green when I got flush with the ground.

The second time I cut it, I was hoping it'd die as it's the wrong plant for the location and I don't want to transplant it. Next time, I'll flush cut it and brush apply herbicide to the cambium.



Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity

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Posts: 25518 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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