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View Full Version : Exploding Seed Pods - Plant ID



loz.
11-09-2007, 10:04
Hi All,

Can anyone hjepl with this - seen on banks of Canal at weekend nr Wigan,

Seeds pods exploded when touched - which kept Daughter amused for ages !

http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/lozjm/christening/S7000777.jpg

http://i129.photobucket.com/albums/p202/lozjm/christening/S7000778.jpg

Thanks

Loz

addo
11-09-2007, 10:12
Hymalayan Balsam by the looks of it. Not native and takes over, common. But I grew up with it and always associate the smell with rivers, so quite like it.
Think parts of the plant are edible (seeds?)

John Fenna
11-09-2007, 10:13
Himalayan Balsam I belive.
Sweet and overpowering scent?
If so it is a bl**dy awful intrusive plant that is choking native flora out of existance on our river!
The seeds are fun but if you move them to a new area they soon take over there.
I understand the seeds are edilbe - if you can catch them!

loz.
11-09-2007, 10:20
Thanks Guys, !!

Just googled Himalayan Balsam and read about its introduction to Kew and its "escape" and invasion of britain.

Hymalayan Balsam (http://www.dgsgardening.btinternet.co .uk/himalbals.htm)

I will also now throw away the seeds i brought back to Ireland with me that i had planned to plant in the garden as i thought the plant was quite nice !!! ( i don't want to be seen to be assisting this kind of intrusion !)

:eek: :eek: :eek:

Cobweb
11-09-2007, 10:46
It is horrible, our river is choking from it, I rip it up when I see it. It's very virulent and causes no end of problems.

Loz, don't throw the seeds away, burn them. If you throw them away in the black bin then they will sprout at the landfill when the bag gets torn.

decorum
12-09-2007, 21:54
Less well known but this Impatiens variety (Impatiens noli-tangere I think) is becoming just as much of a problem:
http://img527.imageshack.us/img527/2166/s2020067anq3.jpg

mace242
12-09-2007, 22:08
It is horrible, our river is choking from it, I rip it up when I see it. It's very virulent and causes no end of problems.

Loz, don't throw the seeds away, burn them. If you throw them away in the black bin then they will sprout at the landfill when the bag gets torn.

Good advice on burning. I was told by a local ranger that to get rid of this beastie they have to dig it all out frequently for at least 18 months because the seeds lie dormant in the soil for that long. They can treat the ground with some herbicides but they refuse to and have to do it by hand which is a nightmare job.

Matt Weir
13-09-2007, 09:03
These fella's are everywhere near me, river banks, streams, my allotment. We were debating what they were (mother in law insisted they are wild orchids) so I can now give an definitive answer.

Thanks peeps.

Pignut
13-09-2007, 13:37
Our local wood is full of the Stuff.... Seen it advancing over the years!

Tis bloody awfull

Karr
13-09-2007, 14:25
Balsam is everywhere on the rivers near me, (Have you noticed the colour of the Honeybees, that has been feeding on this stuff. They become all white) along with Giant Hogweed and the Knotweeds.

I don't like the use of spraying, but it's the only viable option to control them.

Regards Sparrow.