FYI, there is an awesome app called seek that you can put on your phone which will identify plants and bugs using your camera. Works really well.I've got several of these popping up around the yard this year. Are they just random weeds or what? They don't look like anything else on the property.
It really is great. Instant gratification. Is that poison ivy? Nope - that's wild Sarsaparilla. WTF is that? That is a Beaked Hazelnut. I've never seen one either.Last summer a niece was visiting. We're looking at a flower I'd been wondering about for a few years. She aims her fone at it and told me what it was in about 10 seconds.
That's great!...........except I'm the guy from that other thread that doesn't own a cell phone. Maybe I can figure out how to use this tablet and accomplish that.FYI, there is an awesome app called seek that you can put on your phone which will identify plants and bugs using your camera. Works really well.
Looks like this to me:I've got several of these popping up around the yard this year. Are they just random weeds or what? They don't look like anything else on the property.
Close.........I was able to get that app on this tablet. Went out in the yard and checked out a few things. These things popping up are Amur Honeysuckle. They are shrublike and get bright red berries on them after flowering. I remember seeing some of those berries in the fence row.Looks like this to me:
I have some of this stuff. Got infested when putting some free mulch from the city's mulch site on my azaleas several years ago. Still trying to get rid of it. Some places around town have a lot of it, on fences, trees etc.![]()
Japanese honeysuckle - Lonicera japonica (Care, Characteristics, Flower, Images, Toxic)
Japanese honeysuckle (*Lonicera japonica*) is a twining vine native to East Asia. It features white-yellow flowers that emit a pleasant, sweet aroma and are often visited by pollinators such as honeybees, but some parts of the plant are toxic to humans. In landscaping, japanese honeysuckle is...www.picturethisai.com
It's invasive honeysuckle...if you don't get all the roots they will resprout. They spread by both seed and root runners, pull the thing out and then keep checking the area for a couple years. Good luck!![]()
Same here! same problem, same source, mulching the same azaleas. I finally found a way to kill it and not the azaleas. Cut the vine about a foot long or so. Dip the cut end into a little bit of undiluted generic Roundup. Done. And no danger of overspray on your desirables.Looks like this to me:
I have some of this stuff. Got infested when putting some free mulch from the city's mulch site on my azaleas several years ago. Still trying to get rid of it. Some places around town have a lot of it, on fences, trees etc.![]()
Japanese honeysuckle - Lonicera japonica (Care, Characteristics, Flower, Images, Toxic)
Japanese honeysuckle (*Lonicera japonica*) is a twining vine native to East Asia. It features white-yellow flowers that emit a pleasant, sweet aroma and are often visited by pollinators such as honeybees, but some parts of the plant are toxic to humans. In landscaping, japanese honeysuckle is...www.picturethisai.com
