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Invasive Vine Removal Advice Needed
Posted on 2/5/26 at 4:27 pm
Posted on 2/5/26 at 4:27 pm
Our next-door neighbor planted Confederate jasmine when he built next door. It has become intermingled with cat’s claw vine over the years, and has overgrown the privacy fence he installed. He makes no effort to control it, and I’m tired of cutting that shite back. I don’t want to spray it with shrub-killer, as I need to stay on his good side for now. Anyone have any thoughts about how to handle it? (I’m beginning to think about hitting it with a blow torch.)
Posted on 2/5/26 at 6:45 pm to South Shore Cyclist
How have you been cutting it?
Posted on 2/5/26 at 8:23 pm to South Shore Cyclist
Good luck with the cat's claw. You'd have to napalm the area twice then go back with agent orange.
Posted on 2/5/26 at 8:58 pm to South Shore Cyclist
quote:
don’t want to spray it with shrub-killer, as I need to stay on his good side for now.
What did your neighbor say when you talked with him about it?
Posted on 2/5/26 at 11:00 pm to South Shore Cyclist
The only thing to do is to continue to cut it. Honestly, it is a whole lot better than Asiatic Jasmine. I have both and at least the confederate jasmine smells good and doesn’t spread.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 1:19 am to ItzMe1972
quote:
How have you been cutting it?
I usually cut it with hand pruners. My hands start to cramp during a long session, however. The fence that separates our property is quite long, so there’s a lot of vine to manage. I tried using a Ryobi hedge trimmer on it, but the vines clogged up the teeth of the hedge pruner. It worked well when unclogged, but required frequent stops to remove the vines.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 1:26 am to Tigerpaw123
quote:
What did your neighbor say when you talked with him about it?
The last time we spoke about the vines, he lost it because I cut the vines as short as possible on top of the fence, and they flopped over on his side. (I don’t know if he had anything supporting them on the other side.) We don’t want to antagonize him at the moment, as we need to get access to his yard to cut back a tree that is overhanging our roof - another point of contention. (He’s been a dick since our very first meeting. Purchased his lot thinking he could buy us out, but we have no intention of moving.)
Posted on 2/6/26 at 6:54 am to South Shore Cyclist
Well, whose fence is it? If it’s yours, then I wouldn’t worry about his feelings since he’s already been a jerk. If it’s his, there’s really nothing you can do.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 7:07 am to South Shore Cyclist
So even more reason to talk to him about both before doing something
Posted on 2/6/26 at 8:35 am to South Shore Cyclist
You could always salt the fence line.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 10:15 am to South Shore Cyclist
quote:well maybe you ought to wait until you get the tree dealt with before you deal with the jasmine
We don’t want to antagonize him at the moment, as we need to get access to his yard to cut back a tree that is overhanging our roof
Posted on 2/6/26 at 10:32 am to SixthAndBarone
quote:
Well, whose fence is it?
It’s his fence.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 10:35 am to Maillard
quote:
You could always salt the fence line.
I like this idea.
We want to plant clumping bamboo along that side of the house. When his home was built, the builder aligned the second-floor windows with our first-floor windows, so there’s a clear view into our home if our shutters are open. Not sure how the vines and the bamboo will interact.
This post was edited on 2/6/26 at 10:39 am
Posted on 2/6/26 at 12:12 pm to South Shore Cyclist
Look up bamboo root blockers and then let it grow. I would love to do this at my home. The neighbor and their security lighting are maddening.
Posted on 2/6/26 at 12:48 pm to Maillard
quote:
I would love to do this at my home.
There’s a bamboo nursery in Franklinton, LA. We visited there last spring. They have several attractive varieties of the clumping type, which are not seen much in town. A cool day trip, if only to view their grove of huge moso bamboo.
LINK
ETA: If anyone makes the trek to Franklinton, we had a decent meal at the Red Brick Cafe on Lee St.
This post was edited on 2/6/26 at 12:55 pm
Posted on 2/6/26 at 11:07 pm to South Shore Cyclist
Cut the vines and brush the wound with glysophate.
This post was edited on 2/7/26 at 8:09 am
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