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The Water Cooler
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OSA Chit Chat Thread
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<blockquote data-quote="Shinneryfarmer" data-source="post: 3595220" data-attributes="member: 46291"><p>Living down in the South those many years ago we always said " The last two things on earth will be Kudzu and coyotes. And Kudzu would eventually win". </p><p>I just remember we had Kudzu growing on one side of our yard. We would chop it back every year in the fall. The one year we didn't it turned into a weekly chore all summer. Cut it back to the property line and by the next time you mowed it had encroached 7 to 10 feet into the yard. Cut back to line and repeat next time you mowed. We sprayed it one year with weed killer it turned yellowish for about two weeks and came back with a vengeance like it got a ton of fertilizer thrown on it. Fenced it off once and put goats in with it. Guess what I found out, goats don't like kudzu. The only thing still green that wasn't bare dirt inside the fence at the end of the summer was the kudzu.</p><p>Living down in the south we would see people with out of state tags stopped on the side of the road getting clippings to take back home. Most we would stop and warn about the plant but many would take clippings anyway. We had to shake our heads for they know not what they are starting cause it will survive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Shinneryfarmer, post: 3595220, member: 46291"] Living down in the South those many years ago we always said " The last two things on earth will be Kudzu and coyotes. And Kudzu would eventually win". I just remember we had Kudzu growing on one side of our yard. We would chop it back every year in the fall. The one year we didn't it turned into a weekly chore all summer. Cut it back to the property line and by the next time you mowed it had encroached 7 to 10 feet into the yard. Cut back to line and repeat next time you mowed. We sprayed it one year with weed killer it turned yellowish for about two weeks and came back with a vengeance like it got a ton of fertilizer thrown on it. Fenced it off once and put goats in with it. Guess what I found out, goats don't like kudzu. The only thing still green that wasn't bare dirt inside the fence at the end of the summer was the kudzu. Living down in the south we would see people with out of state tags stopped on the side of the road getting clippings to take back home. Most we would stop and warn about the plant but many would take clippings anyway. We had to shake our heads for they know not what they are starting cause it will survive. [/QUOTE]
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