Japanese Knotweed

Author
Discussion

Harry Flashman

19,369 posts

243 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
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Don't be scared. We did this.

Can answer in a bit more detail later. some lenders will lend and take a mature attitude, we got seller to pay for treatment plan etc.

craig1912

3,312 posts

113 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
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Thanks for the comments. No mortgage so that’s not an issue. There were other issues so were not going fir it anyway. Cheers

monthefish

20,443 posts

232 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
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strath44 said:
Not sure if it differs in England but we looked at a house in Scotland with Knotweed in the garden - one large clump about 4m from the house.

What makes knotweed hellish is it can perpetrate pretty much anything such as concrete tarmac etc it just looks for weaknesses.
...just to offer another view, a Chartered Surveyor I spoke to, who has decades of experience in residential property, said that his firm has never seen a building be structurally damaged by knotweed.

We know it does/can happen, but like many of these things it has been vastly blown out of proportion.
Yes, it can be a tricky fecker to get rid of, but it can be eradicated fairly simply if the correct procedures are followed.

Julia121

329 posts

55 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
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Do the gardens each side have the same or do they look like like they've just been mowed whistle

strath44

1,358 posts

149 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
quotequote all
monthefish said:
...just to offer another view, a Chartered Surveyor I spoke to, who has decades of experience in residential property, said that his firm has never seen a building be structurally damaged by knotweed.

We know it does/can happen, but like many of these things it has been vastly blown out of proportion.
Yes, it can be a tricky fecker to get rid of, but it can be eradicated fairly simply if the correct procedures are followed.
Just wish the banks would see it that way!

I researched diy treatment and its really not that bad nor expensive to do properly. However most lenders want a certificate of removal. This would be useful if you could go the diy route -

https://www.ebay.co.uk/i/351720857080?chn=ps&n...

Dr Mike Oxgreen

4,126 posts

166 months

Thursday 10th September 2020
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NapierDeltic said:
And all of that is well and good, but it could be seeding from a source upstream, or an adjacent garden, etc.
I know I'm being pedantic here, but it pays to be clear with terminology. In this country, Japanese Knotweed virtually never produces viable seeds, so that isn't how it grows.

I'm pretty sure you meant that it's spreading by vegetative fragments carried by water or from another garden.

monthefish

20,443 posts

232 months

Friday 11th September 2020
quotequote all
strath44 said:
monthefish said:
...just to offer another view, a Chartered Surveyor I spoke to, who has decades of experience in residential property, said that his firm has never seen a building be structurally damaged by knotweed.

We know it does/can happen, but like many of these things it has been vastly blown out of proportion.
Yes, it can be a tricky fecker to get rid of, but it can be eradicated fairly simply if the correct procedures are followed.
Just wish the banks would see it that way!

I researched diy treatment and its really not that bad nor expensive to do properly. However most lenders want a certificate of removal. This would be useful if you could go the diy route -

https://www.ebay.co.uk/i/351720857080?chn=ps&n...
Absolutely.

There's a local contractor here that deals with Knotweed removal, and I'm sure he does a very good job (and he would eradicate it at least as well as the big firms can) however as he can't produce a 25 year guarantee, his services are of limited value.

paulw123

3,226 posts

191 months

Tuesday 21st September 2021
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Dr Mike Oxgreen said:
NapierDeltic said:
And all of that is well and good, but it could be seeding from a source upstream, or an adjacent garden, etc.
I know I'm being pedantic here, but it pays to be clear with terminology. In this country, Japanese Knotweed virtually never produces viable seeds, so that isn't how it grows.

I'm pretty sure you meant that it's spreading by vegetative fragments carried by water or from another garden.
Correct, as long as you isolate it it won’t spread to different locations. I think it’s hilarious how people/mortgage companies cry about what is just a plant. With time, persistence and a little know how, it can be permanently killed with £25 worth of glyphosate.

Wacky Racer

38,170 posts

248 months

Tuesday 21st September 2021
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Gallup XL is what you need, available from Ebay etc.

Kills it stone dead.

Get a backpack sprayer....great for weeds in block paving too.

Road2Ruin

5,236 posts

217 months

Tuesday 21st September 2021
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Wacky Racer said:
Gallup XL is what you need, available from Ebay etc.

Kills it stone dead.
It doesn't. It will kill it off temporarily, but it will come back in smaller quantities over a few years.
Repeated spraying is definitely needed.

Lotobear

6,358 posts

129 months

Tuesday 21st September 2021
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paulw123 said:
Correct, as long as you isolate it it won’t spread to different locations. I think it’s hilarious how people/mortgage companies cry about what is just a plant. With time, persistence and a little know how, it can be permanently killed with £25 worth of glyphosate.
Very much this

paulw123

3,226 posts

191 months

Tuesday 21st September 2021
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
Wacky Racer said:
Gallup XL is what you need, available from Ebay etc.

Kills it stone dead.
It doesn't. It will kill it off temporarily, but it will come back in smaller quantities over a few years.
Repeated spraying is definitely needed.
Yes it takes repeated treatments but as long as you have patience it’s fine.