Talkback: Cleavers
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Eerrmmm! I think not....we have the national collection here. We run a caravan park of 8 acres and until this year we had hardly any but this year there has been an explosion and it's everywhere, probably because our customers walk around the park all the time. I don't care much that it is useful it is a flippin pain in the rear and so difficult to eradicate. Like you I am dreading next year!! Good luck with yours...lol
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A pain, indeed. Our cats get the seeds caught in their fur, causing tangles, (or helping to spread the wretched plants).
And another pain - I am allergic to them. If they touch my skin, the roughness causes me to come up in large red weals. I hate the things. And the root is so small and fragile that they are the very devil
to get rid of!
It seems to have been a good year for Goosegrass. It is annual that is quick to seed, so you need to pull it out early. The fragile roots don't make any difference - it's a new plant that comes up. I actually don't mind dealing with it; it seems to surrender quite easily.
Never have we seen so much cleavers, goosegrass, johnny run by the hedge, sticky grass - as many names as there are. I even found a piece up in the golden hop, about 8 foot high, never had that before. Ir is certainly a very good year for it. Also in other countries, my sister in laws garden in the Netherlands is overun with it as well - must like the wet?
Have had loads growing in the garden, what a pain its everywhere. Do you htink it likes the wet weather? As you say Shrinking violet they get caught in the cats fur and as one of them doesnt like being brushed its not easy to get them out. I have always known them as Sweethearts is that a Sussex thing do you think.
Maud,
I'm sure the Sweethearts name is more widespread than that - I know it from Gloucestershire - but the indispensible The Englishman's Flora by Geoffrey Grigson only lists it as from Somerset, but then language research moves on, and the book is 45 years old.
He quotes the Flora Vectensis (1856) as saying that it was commonly chopped up and fed to young goslings in the Isle of Wight. It is recorded in an old herbal as a cure for skin diseases, scurvy and piles, although what the exact treatment might have been in the latter case I don't know.
Joe
Glad im not a gosling or have scurvy. Im sick of them as fast as i get rid of them more appear. Thanks Jo
Like Shrinking Violet, my son and I are allergic to some, but luckily not all, strains of goose grass. The resulting weals can take months to heal - most of my colleagues thought that my arms had been scalded. I couldn't believe it when I saw a chef on Great British Menu advocating adding these to salads!!! Ouch!
I thought I was unlucky, Chrissie, but your allergic reaction sounds much worse than mine, which usually clear up in a couple of days or so. And as for adding them to salads - I don't think so. There are many more tasty leaves to choose from.