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-   -   Some bamboo pics (https://www.corvetteflorida.com/forums/showthread.php?t=107984)

Rich Z 02-07-2017 09:01 PM

Some bamboo pics
 
Connie and I took a walk the other day and I had my Panasonic Lumix with me. Took some pics of a couple of the bamboo groves.

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_01_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_02_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_03_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_04_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_05_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_06_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_07_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_08_2017.jpg

Rich Z 02-08-2017 12:55 PM

Looks like some birds have created nesting cavities in some of the bamboo, and I'm sure lizards and tree frogs will hole up in the old split bamboo.

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_09_2017.jpg

http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/pics/bamboo_10_2017.jpg

mrr23 02-08-2017 07:30 PM

well at least they were cozy during the cold

navy2kcoupe 02-08-2017 08:50 PM

Rich, what's the life expectancy of the bamboo? Does it last awhile, like
multiple years? Does it "die" every fall like the grass I'm used to up north, then
come back to life in the spring? Any commercial use for it, like could you
harvest it and sell it or grind it up and use it for feed?
Just wondering :shrug01:
Andy :wavey:

Rich Z 02-08-2017 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by navy2kcoupe (Post 196968)
Rich, what's the life expectancy of the bamboo? Does it last awhile, like
multiple years? Does it "die" every fall like the grass I'm used to up north, then
come back to life in the spring? Any commercial use for it, like could you
harvest it and sell it or grind it up and use it for feed?
Just wondering :shrug01:
Andy :wavey:

Actually bamboo lives a very long time. When you see a grove of bamboo, what you are normally seeing is just one plant. Each culm (shoot) is just like a branch of the plant, with rhyzomes that run underground. But bamboos will die normally when they produce seed, which is a very long cycle. I have never seen any of our bamboo set seed.

As for cold hardiness, some of the varieties can survive sub-zero temps, as the runner types (genus Phyllostachys) are really a temperate climate evergreen plant. Some can survive quite well up through Ag zone 6, reaching into mid America.

http://www.bamboogarden.com/cold%20hardy%20bamboo.html

Heck bamboo is used commercially in the orient extensively. And some of this seems to be catching on in the USA. I'm sure you have seen bamboo flooring, furniture, and even bedsheets are processed from bamboo fibers.

I don't believe you could use it for feed, as only the new shoots would be likely able to be used in that fashion.

CHASZ51 02-10-2017 06:38 AM

I hear it is hard to get rid of it once it's growing thick. Guess it is not good for a small yard.

Cor66Vette 02-10-2017 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CHASZ51 (Post 196988)
I hear it is hard to get rid of it once it's growing thick. Guess it is not good for a small yard.

Ha ha, tell me about it!

I was given a small bunch of bamboo and planted it in my garden when I lived on Long Island. In a little more than a year, it spread to such a degree where I couldn't control it no matter what. I planted it on one side of the house and it came up on the other side. I tried to barricade the roots from spreading, but it was too late, and I couldn't dig deep enough to put in a partition. I even dug it completely out, but it just came back stronger. Had I known this I would have planted it in a 55 gallon drum and buried the drum. I always wondered what the new owners did about it?

Rich Z 02-10-2017 02:49 PM

Yeah, it can be a problem, because it sure does like to spread. Fortunately we have enough acreage where hopefully it won't get to be a problem. However, I did plant some yellow vivax fairly close to the house a number of years ago, and so far don't regret the idea.

I have had success with cutting rhizomes and then staying on top of it trying to put new culms up. Unless it can produce leaves for photosynthesis, it WILL die.

Cutting culms and spraying the stumps with a defoliant does seem to knock it back in areas you don't want it, too.

But yeah, bamboo is pretty darn hardy. But on the plus side, it is often used in the orient to purposely grow under houses, as a safeguard against the ground opening up under dwellings from earthquakes, sink holes, etc. The rhizomes can be almost as effective as steel cables for support. So if you live in an area prone to sink holes, this could maybe be a consideration.

CHASZ51 02-11-2017 12:34 PM

I just bought a Royal empress tree. Came as a stick in a box with roots. Really starting to take off.

Rich Z 02-11-2017 01:23 PM

Yeah, we have purchased some bare root fruit trees. Some did well, and others did not. Actually have had better luck with a local nursery. Costs more, but they are well started and produced fruit a LOT earlier.


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