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After having spent a good chunk of the morning ripping out highly invasive Japanese honeysuckle, I felt like a quick little doodle of everybody's favorite chibi squash kachina having the same trouble.

Just to put on my ecologist hat here--if you live in the Southeast, please please PLEASE do not plant Japanese honeysuckle. It's harder to get rid of than kudzu. The only way to kill it is with nasty herbicides, goats, or a tactical nuke. I am fighting a holding action against it at the moment, but I don't delude myself that I'm winning.

Yes, it smells pretty for a couple of weeks, but it strangles trees and kills native plants all year long. They still sell it at Lowes, but that does NOT make it okay to plant. (They sell some really bad plants at big home improvement chains...) The Nature Conservancy and every other native plant alliance on earth begs you not to plant it, in fact. It's one of the very worst invasives here. I spend dozens of man-hours a year fighting the stuff in my yard, and there are thousands of grad students the South over spending their summers trying to untwine it from around strangled trees.

There are lovely American honeysuckles that aren't hideously invasive and which smell just as pretty, and which the hummingbirds will like even more.* Better yet, bugs will actually be able to nibble it, and that means that those hummingbirds will have something to feed their babies. (Hummingbirds feed bugs to hatchlings, not nectar.) You might have to go to a garden store instead of just Home Depot to get it, but planting native honeysuckle instead of the Japanese stuff is one of the most straightforward things you can do to help make the world a better place.

Ahem. Okay, done preaching. Digital, a quickie, but you can order prints if you are, like me, a hopeless Squash fangirl. (There's gotta be a couple out there...)

[link]



*Gee, you think maybe I've heard those excuses before...?

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March 28, 2010
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:iconhrhtomas:
Thanks for the heads up.
Reply
:iconjimfredriksson:
I just love the style of these paintings, it's a brilliant collection.
It's all amazing, you're a really true artist with true passion
Reply
:icontaren14:
If you didn't live in Australia, I could send a few goats your way.
Reply
:icondiamondleaf:
Adorable and educational to boot.

*is very happy her two 3foot garden plots are empty*
Reply
:iconmustardofdoom:
~mustardofdoom May 22, 2010  Student Traditional Artist
Invasive species... the bane of biologists.
Reply
:iconursulapatch:
Poor Squash. I feel his and your pain.
Reply
:iconmusestalker:
This is SO cute!! I hate hate hate pulling weeds although we don't have too many THIS bad :) I live in the desert so we get a TON of goat head weeds which suck in their own fun way :D ESPECIALLY when you find one in your house with bare feet!!
Reply
:iconcharishawk:
This is absolutely adorable. I love it.
Reply
:iconjustria:
*Justria Apr 20, 2010  Hobbyist Writer
Sympathy from the Pacific Northwest! Over here, the big pest is Himalayan Blackberry. It spread via seeds, roots, and will put down new roots wherever the stem touches the ground. There's a huge root ball you have to dig out if you want to have any hope of permanently removing the plant. And there are thorns. The one positive thing is that it's kind of nice being able to pick blackberries along the road in the summer (until they out-compete the salmonberries).
Reply
:iconayuichi:
~ayuICHI Apr 10, 2010  Hobbyist General Artist
Hahahaha soooo random XD <3333 I love it.
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