[AT] OT weed trees was Knowing when to call it a day

Mike M meulenms at gmx.com
Mon Nov 18 15:50:27 PST 2019


For smaller tires that are prone to honey locust punctures, I've had
good luck with Slime.

Mike M


On 11/18/2019 11:18 AM, James Peck wrote:
> Honey Locust, Osage Orange, and multiflora grow in the Western Reserve where I grew up
>
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connecticut_Western_Reserve
>
> Aaron Dickinson AT List Member and soda blastor <a_dickinson at att.net>; My sister’s property in Texas has it all, Honey Locust, Osage orange, some sort of briar that jumps out and grabs you, and if the plants don’t get you then there are the chiggers and copperhead snakes.  Her Locust have the nice 4” thorns that keep the tire shop in business and her John Deere on flats.
>
> Herb Metz AT List member <metz-h.b at comcast.net>; According to Wikipedia the honey locust is native to central north America and the thorns are 1 1/4" to 4" long.  We had couple hundred trees in our four acre yard consisting of trees, buildings and grass.  I readily remember where that one thorny honey locust tree grew.  Herb(GA)
> .
>
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