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Bamboo plants in run

Interesting thread.

I am bumping this old thread because I have a bamboo problem. A rather bad one. And I haven't built my chicken coop yet. What if I placed my coop and run over the worst infestation site. Do you think the chickens would eat/destroy it all or would their poo fertilize it?
 
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i have no idea
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Killing bamboo is pretty easy if you know how. Cut it all down an till the ground if you can. That breaks it in to peaces from the single giant plant. The important part is spring. Bamboo only sprouts in spring an mine is now. After cutting it all down you walk around an break off the new shoots at the ground a few time in the spring. They are fragile as young shoots. After a year or 3 with no standing poles the plant will starve an die...


Chickens wont help you. Chickens are used to make bamboo grow faster in bamboo farms.
 
Have you consider growing Italian prune instead? The prune give shade for the chicken from spring to fall and also provide prune for human and chickens. My chickens love the sweet prune.
 
There are two types of bamboo, runners ie could spread fast in any and all directions, or clumpers stay in one place spread to maybe ten to thirty feet in diameter.

I live about forty-five miles north of Beaumont Texas and have both.

I have Black bamboo(runner) that is about six years old it hasn't grown over six high or about eight foot wide.
I have Leopard Bamboo(runner) six years old, it has spread in three directions,and its about five to six foot tall.
These two are seven years old.

I tried Moso which is one of the fastest and largest growing runners, but not enough rainfall or humidity here.

Your best bet is Buddha's Belly(Bambusa ventricosa[FONT=Arial, Helvetica])[/FONT] its a clumper, mine is about four years old about eight to 14 foot tall,it dies back when we have a hard winter, but roars right back in the spring.

check out these facts and please google bamboo you might be suprised at what it can do good or bad!

Bamboo has an average return on investment in the case of plantation of 3-5 years, as opposed to some 10 years for other types of wood. In short, bamboo is the material and even food of the future.
Along with its tremendous material and food value, bamboo has an enormous ecologically potential. In an age ridden with fuel wars, and an ever declining ozone layer, natural products like bamboo have taken a front scene in the international energy crises.
Bamboo can be utilized in the production of renewable ethanol and diesel. Also, ecologically speaking, the utilization of bamboo may save our environment because of the massive amounts of carbon dioxide that is sequestered while it grows.
Bamboo utilizes carbon dioxide at a rate astronomically higher than other trees, and does it year around because it is an evergreen. Fuel made from bamboo would have a neutral carbon dioxide impact because any fuel made and burned from bamboo will release the same amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere that was consumed by the bamboo while it was growing.
Along with the fuel possibilities, bamboo has the fastest reforestation potential of any plant, making a new canopy in burnt landscapes in a matter of months. Bamboo is an environmentally safe, renewable source of fuel and building material that has a positive effect on the environment in an age ridden with ecological problems brought on by the widespread use of fossil fuels.
Bamboo is quite possible the golden chicken amongst plants. With time and dedicated research, perhaps our future will be a bit brighter due to the widespread use of bamboo. Do not be surprised to see a bamboo plantation pop up in a field near you! Need more information, click to learn more
 
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It is not actually bamboo. It is Japanese knotweed/itadori, super invasive and a pain in my grass. I think getting rid of the stuff will be a labour of love/hate.
 

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