A GROWING CONCERN: The neverending tale of horsetail

I LOVE IT here on the Peninsula, gardening heaven, but our gardening Nirvana has also been shattered by the omnipresent horsetail.

I get this question all the time and my answer is always the same.

Here is a letter from this week:

Question: Hi Andrew. I have horsetail in my garden and how do I get rid of them? I have been told Crossbow will do the trick, but Helena Chemical Company says not to use it on gardens, so I am at a standstill! Help!

Walter

If it is any consolation, suffering from the scourge of horsetail is a problem you share with roughly half of all gardeners on the Peninsula.

The other half live in fear that this demon weed will come galloping through their yard soon.

For me, unfortunately, horsetail comes into my landscape projects all too often, riding bareback and unbridled on the trees root-ball from the originating nursery.

But enough with the puns.

You asked to get advice straight from the horse’s mouth. Horsetail is the regional common plant name, also known as shave grass, scouring rush, bottle brush or, to many across North America and Europe, one of the “four horsemen of the garden apocalypse.”

To botanists, it is called Equisetum arvense and derives both it’s most common name and Latin categorization because of the resemblance of plume-like branches to a horse’s tail.

But it is actually the emerging whitish-to-light-brown, hollow and unbranched stem that produces spores and aids in reproduction.

The problem with horsetail is just how well it thrives in diverse conditions that range from wet, poorly drained areas to beaches, gravel roads, gardens, lawns, pastors, orchards and, most likely, over your entire property.

The plant’s ancestry goes back millions of years to the dinosaur age, where it flourished as prehistoric trees and forests.

Horsetail actually is responsible for a good percentage of current coal deposits.

Horsetail is the cockroach of weeds, highly adaptable and lying deep in the ground, where it produces rhizomes that can grow over 6 feet high. Then, because the rhizomes are heavily noded (areas that can produce new shoots) and deep, pulling them out only snaps them off and produces more shoots.

In fact, in a 1985 research project, Canadian scientists hand-weeded a plot 16 times in a single season and the next year, that plot looked identical to the control area next to it.

In Wisconsin, one area was sprayed three times in a single season with Roundup weed killer only to produce a dense area the next year of a monoculture of horsetail because everything else was killed off.

Here are my recommendations for control:

• Be vigilant

If you have a beginning problem, aggressively attack it, unrelentingly digging down and pulling out all the rhizomes.

• Co-mingle plants

Horsetail is native and makes feathery fur like undergrowth.

In other words, embrace this plant or use it with an ornamental flower such as cosmos or cleome, which have similar foliage and whose low leaves look poor as the seasons progress. Horsetail will hide that visual flaw.

• Shade

Horsetail does very poorly in shade, so tower many dense plants above it in order to shade it out.

• Mowing

Mowing over a period of time will keep it in check and suppress it, which is why you don’t find it in lawns or pastures as much.

• No herbicides

Don’t use herbicides, they mostly just chemically pinch it.

Besides, the products that do work (i.e. Crossover) are incredibly hazardous to you, other plants, birds, bees and our watersheds.

So don’t horse around with them, take action. And stay well all!

________

Andrew May is a freelance writer and ornamental horticulturist who dreams of having Clallam and Jefferson counties nationally recognized as “Flower Peninsula USA.” Send him questions c/o Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362, or email news@peninsuladailynews.com (subject line: Andrew May).

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