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Anyone any idea what this is?


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Growing next to an old railway line: about 4 feet tall. Don't look wild to me but I haven't a clue: :blink: Or maybe some exotic escapee!

looks like indian balsam. from what i am reading becoming a pest!

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cheers Byron: :clapper: I had an idea it might be a foreign invader: and not I'm not about to go and pull it up: it covers an area of about 12 x 12 feet and is right in the middle of a load of nettles.

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Guest Ditch_Shitter

Yeppers. Himalayan Balsam. Impatiens glandulifera. It is also known as " Indian Balsam " these days. I'm resisting an ethnic comment by sheer force of will here! :laugh:

 

I first came upon it as a garden plant, some forty odd years ago. Great stuff; It developes long, swollen seed pods which explode when touched, thus broadcasting a shower of seeds.

 

Seems it's now becoming a recognised invasive of river banks and such places.

 

Oh well. That by the river side. Japanese Knotweed elsewhere .....

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Cheers DS for clearing that up... i have used the name Himalayan Balsam all my life, just wondered if there was 2 species... used to love popping the seed pods as a kid. the spread of this is quite remarkable. it needs controlling. The thing i find curious is how has it spread so well/ The seed pods explode and propel the seeds, but these seeds will only travel 4 or 5 foot at the very most...so how the hell has it taken over even the tiny becks around me? Are the seeds sticky? :big_boss::hmm:

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Are the seeds sticky?

 

 

Not as I ever remember noticing, mate. They shower down like hale stones, don't they? I can only imagine then that they might prove attractive to birds, and yet undigestable?

 

Or, given their new found propensity for colonising moving watersides; Perhaps they float well? I genuinely don't know the proper answer though. That's just conjecture from me.

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Yeppers. Himalayan Balsam. Impatiens glandulifera. It is also known as " Indian Balsam " these days. I'm resisting an ethnic comment by sheer force of will here! :laugh:

 

I first came upon it as a garden plant, some forty odd years ago. Great stuff; It developes long, swollen seed pods which explode when touched, thus broadcasting a shower of seeds.

 

Seems it's now becoming a recognised invasive of river banks and such places.

 

Oh well. That by the river side. Japanese Knotweed elsewhere .....

 

Feckin' ell, is there anything you DON'T know about :doh::doh::doh::doh::doh::laugh::laugh:

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