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Wim, it struck a nerve seeing a photo of Saponaria officinalis (bouncingbet)... while pretty enough in flower, it is on noxious weed lists for many US States, the species considered invasive, now successfully colonizing most of North America and Canada. I pull them out of my lawn all the time, the sturdy pull-resistant tap roots need a tool such as a dandelion weeder to pry out the root. I see some yards around the area, where homeowners probably not knowing this is an invasive pest, allow them to grow into big patches because of the pretty flowers. Is this plant considered invasive in Europe or other countries/continents?http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=SAOF4&mapType=nativity&photoID=saof4_002_avp.tif
Marc, if I'm correct S. officinalis is indigenous in Europe. So it was probably imported in the USA ?? Here it grows in my herbgarden and is planted in a plastic bucket with the bottom cut out so I do not really have a problem with this plant.
Marc,maybe I should remove the picture. I do not want to be responsible for you getting to much stress Never heard that it could be an invasive weed, there are a lot of people which have this plant in their herbgarden. Since it's native here it probably has too many natural predators to be invasive.
And some more:Echinacea 'Virgin'Glycirrhiza glabraLippia citriodora2 x Lonicera ... (you see, I'm really bad at remembering their names)Saponaria officinalisViola tricolor
Quote from: WimB on July 22, 2010, 05:54:43 PMAnd some more:Echinacea 'Virgin'Glycirrhiza glabraLippia citriodora2 x Lonicera ... (you see, I'm really bad at remembering their names)Saponaria officinalisViola tricolorWim, What a nice pattern on Viola tricolor - is it a cultivar or did it appear spontaneously in your garden?Gerd