The bane of gardening in my yard is Himalayan Blackberries.
Himalayan Blackberries are a non-native and invasive blackberry that was introduced in Western Washington some time ago, and since then have spread to such a degree that they are taking over many wild spaces with giant brambles that are very difficult to deal with. They have huge thorns and at times seem to jump out and grab you in a painful embrace that is hard to extract yourself from.
As you might be able to tell, I have no love for this plant.
I do like blackberries as a berry. Every year my kids and I go to some of the many parks that have been infested and pick buckets of sweet and delicious berries for jam, cobbler, and pies. I just don’t want them in my yard.
When I moved into my house a few years ago, half my backyard was a giant blackberry bramble. It was so bad that for the first few months I didn’t even know exactly how big my yard was or that there was a spring flowing through my yard. After a month or so I got up some courage and spent over an hour to hack myself a little path through the blackberries, so I could find the fence poles that marked the edges of the yard. I then spent months fighting the blackberries in combat that left me bruised and bloodied. To this day, the battle still rages on as the monsters refuse to die and new ones seem to pop up every day.
My neighbor gave up on the fight, so now my yard is threatened with a wave of invaders from his place of safety for them, waiting for me to lose interest so they can leap across my fence in mass force and re-take my yard.
I am a gentle man, not prone to violence, slow to anger, and abhorrent of chemical warfare, but when it comes to Himalayan Blackberries, my protector self comes out and all bets are off. I’ve tried hand to hand combat, trying desperately to wrestle them out by the roots. I’ve tried repeatedly attacking them with weapons of destruction via my brush cutter. And now I have fallen to new lows of attacking them with chemicals. My strategy of late is to poison them via snipping a vine and dipping the end in concentrated RoundUp, hoping that the poison will spread to the roots, killing the whole plant. So far, I haven’t seen the desired effect, but I am still giving it some time.
Yes, I am a plant murderer. I have to be if I have any hope of protecting my vulnerable fruit trees, berry bushes, herbs, and vegetables.
Jun 22, 2007 | 10:26 AM PST
Wow!!! They must have their picture in the dictionary next to the word INVASIVE!!! I just got a blackberry last fall that is thornless and upright. I think it is Arapaho. Its not supposed to spread like that.
Jun 22, 2007 | 11:17 AM PST
Oh my goodness! you were not kidding when you said invasive!!!! Luckily we don't have that problem here in GA. But, we do have extremely invasive wild grape vines and they don't even produce fruit. But atleast they don't have thorns. I have been pulling wild grape vines for many season. and my neighbor has also give up the fight...which has made the problem worse for me.
Jun 22, 2007 | 2:37 PM PST
They pop up all over my yard, I kill one (and I get that damn root) it pops up elsewhere, the ghost of invasive blackberries. I try to explain how they are here and no one BELIEVES me, I am going to send them to your post, very eloquent. Does the job well!
Nov 24, 2007 | 7:36 PM PST
blackberries.... what can l say .we have tried cutting them back and digging out the roots, we then got a goat who ate some of the blackberries and with somesuccess he helped control the hight they would grow. and we now have some grass growing not just blackberries.We have now reluctantly found that for the sake of our gerden round up is the only method of control that has some effect.As we live on a acarage we now employ a spaying contractor to spray our paddocks just before they flower .but it is still a constant battle, l confess l hate blackberries....
Mar 26, 2008 | 9:02 PM PST
I wonder if you have an update. In my last place I owned 4.5 acres. Blackberries and poison ivy were the bane of my existence. I must confess thought that poison ivy held my interest as it is several orders of magnitude down the Karma scale.
I used to find an outcropping and round up it, then walk in expanding concentric circles until I found the next location where it popped up - repeat from location B. This seems to work pretty well for me in that the roots were under constant stress.
Although, poison ivy may not be the street fighter that blackberries can be.