• @lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com
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    8 days ago

    If you want mint & don’t care about other plants, then I don’t see a problem. Some people might consider its low maintenance effort a good thing. 🤷

    • @werty@sh.itjust.works
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      87 days ago

      Its ability to choke out the weeds at my rental, thereby reducing the amount of weeding i need to do, is much appreciated. Also goes well with roast lamb.

    • @LovableSidekick@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      So mint is highly invasive? I was wondering what the elite knowledge was. TBH my guess was that there’s a hallucinogenic plant that looks like mint.

      • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        They spread and are really really hard to fully kill

        Source: I have no idea why my mint is still alive. It’s waterlogged for half the year and neglected the other half

      • @crawlspace@lemm.ee
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        77 days ago

        There is actually a hallucinogenic plant that looks kind of similar to mint, but I think they’re referring to the fact that mint chokes other plants out and just sticks around and keeps coming back.

  • @Mothra@mander.xyz
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    9 days ago

    I obviously don’t know… :(

    Edit: Thanks for the answers - now I know! Where I live it doesn’t spread that easily, and often when it’s growing well it disappears overnight or in a matter of days thanks to caterpillars or grasshoppers. I didn’t know it would grow out of control in other places.

    • TTimo
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      959 days ago

      Once it gets going … it’s hard to get rid of

      • @BluescreenOfDeath@lemmy.world
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        909 days ago

        It’s not weed, it’s that mint is very aggressive in spreading.

        I personally like the mint growing in the yard it makes mowing the lawn smell great.

        • Makhno
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          9 days ago

          Weed as a classification is bullshit anyway. Iirc, it’s whatever broad-leaf plants got killed by roundup, Monsanto declared ‘weeds’.

          Clover used to be a common part of American lawns

          • Miles O'Brien
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            249 days ago

            I keep telling people to let clover grow, and half the stuff that’s supposedly bad for their lawn is actually good for a healthy patch of dirt but someone invented a problem so they could sell the solution.

            I’ve actually had landscaping people knock on my door and explain that half my lawn is weeds and they can take care of it for me on a 6 month contract or whatever bs…

            Like Bruh my lawn is carefully cultivated to grow all natural native plants, specifically with the intent of boosting local insect and pollinator activity, there’s a reason this half-are is the only place you see butterflies.

            I’m not about to let some punk in headphones and a “Lastname Lawncare” t-shirt flatten all of this to 1/2in of plain green uniform grass. That’s boring as shit. And bad for the environment. And boring. as. shit.

          • snooggums
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            9 days ago

            A weed is something you don’t want to grow right there. It just means undesired plant life and changes on a whim.

            Monsanto tried to categorize clover as weeds in their advertising because the plant killer that was used to kill broadleaf plants that interfere with grass lawns also kills clover. They demonized clover because it was collateral damage!

              • Miles O'Brien
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                59 days ago

                My parents outsource their Lawncare to me, and I have been taking the huge patch of clover near a corn field and transplanting it around their yard. Just cutting a shovel ful of dirt out and swapping them, and watering the area.

                No idea if it’ll work the way I want it to, but I guess I’ll see if it spreads this summer.

                I’d love to go to my in-laws and use a big seed spreader to throw clover and other native plants around, but that would just lead to them killing it all and hiring a lawn company to replant Kentucky bluegrass or something lame like that.

                • snooggums
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                  49 days ago

                  Clover is pretty hardy and in my experience doesn’t even fight the grass aince they thrive on different nutrients or something like that.

            • @dai@lemmy.world
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              29 days ago

              The bur seed clover in my lawn, shits a nightmare to deal with. Dogs get the seeds in every inch of fur, spread it around the lawn and hack them up when grooming themselves.

              It’s mostly under control after a few years of tackling it.

              I’d love another variant to replace the horrible one I’ve got.

              • snooggums
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                39 days ago

                Ok, that sounds like it sucks.

                But that isn’t the clover we are talking about when we say clover is awesome. White clover is generally what people are referring to when they are talking about lawns and landscaping.

                • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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                  39 days ago

                  Red clover is native to the west coast, it’s edible, makes a good incense apparently, and it looks rather handsome imo.

        • @Concave1142@lemmy.world
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          59 days ago

          I grow my mint along the side of the house where the HVAC condensation runs out! It helps with the whole area just being a giant muddy mess since it is also on the shady side of the house.

        • @I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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          38 days ago

          People who say this have never battled goat head burr, burr clover or bristly ox tongue. Invasive as shit, crowd out threatened species and necessary natives for plant-specific pollinators, poke through your shoes and bike tires and generally run your day.

            • @I_Fart_Glitter@lemmy.world
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              -18 days ago

              Ok…? I really don’t get this “I love all plants equally, peace on earth, bro” messaging that pops up any time someone mentions a highly invasive plant.

              Some plants, in the wrong spaces, are highly damaging to wildlife on many levels. It’s not just about wanting a monocultured lawn and having been tricked by Monsanto propaganda.

              • @daggermoon@lemmy.world
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                48 days ago

                I think you got me wrong. What made you think I like invasive plants? I’m aware they’re an ecological disaster. The term weed just pisses me off. People spray chemicals on their lawns to kill off native plants because they’re “weeds”. Fuck grass and fuck invasive plants (like grass). I can think of quite a few plants I hate and would like eraticated from North America actually.

  • @Wilco@lemm.ee
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    119 days ago

    We put a few mint plants in a large concrete planter and it filled the whole planter in one season. It does keep mice, cats, and mosquitos away.

    • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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      117 days ago

      Tenants take note, give your landlord a lovely gift of established ground mint when you leave your rental!

  • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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    209 days ago

    My buddy warned me about the mint the pervious owners planted, and I pulled it right away. It was right by our basement entrance so I frequently peer in and inspect for mint shoots. I think there must be a buried barrier or something (like landscaping cloth) preventing it from spreading outside the bed it was in. I found a small sprig 4 years after pulling everything I could find.

    • @RowRowRowYourBot@sh.itjust.works
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      -19 days ago

      “ When we bought our house 2 years ago, the previous owners had planted mint in the ground, despite having a raised garden bad. My wife and I spent an entire afternoon taking back mulch and digging to remove the mint. We built a 2nd garden box and put it over the top of the mint spot, but I’m already seeing bits of mint poking up from under the box…”

      That’sthe comment beneath ypurs and it explains the problem

  • @runner_g@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    319 days ago

    When we bought our house 2 years ago, the previous owners had planted mint in the ground, despite having a raised garden bad. My wife and I spent an entire afternoon taking back mulch and digging to remove the mint. We built a 2nd garden box and put it over the top of the mint spot, but I’m already seeing bits of mint poking up from under the box…