Problem I've read about making critters eat milkweed is some varieties are deadly. A handful can supposedly kill sheep.
I've read that tillage can make the problem worse because they regrow from the root, and tillage chops up the roots into many pieces.
I know pulling doesn't get the roots, but if you can get enough plants off the same root system, it will spend energy to grow and eventually weaken the root system leaving it open to fungus attack.
I have been looking a vast areas seem to be interconnected to one common root system, was wondering about grabbing a syringe and injecting roundup into the stalk to get pulled through the whole community. Doubt it would work right though.
The spot spraying might work if you kept it up too. I just don't have time to keep at it. I do know I don't have time to let it spread more either.
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Today's Featured Article - Product Review: Lead Substitutes - by Mike Schordine. Lead was oriinally added to gasoline as an upper cylinder lubricant. It lubes the valves and seats. If you rebuild the motor, you could use hardened seats and valves, and unleaded fuel. But if your old tractor runs good, a simple lead substitute added to the gas is a perfectly reasonable solution. And, if you are like me, your tractor is under cover, but it sits outside. So with every temperature change, the humidity in the air collects in the fuel tank, in the form of water.
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