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SWBTATTReg

(22,114 posts)
17. Located next to the Niangua river, about a mile from the back exit/entrance to Bennett Springs
Sat May 30, 2020, 05:13 PM
May 2020

state park. My family has been down there since I'm thinking the early 1920s. A beautiful area, chock full of wild life, crazy but neat neighbors (my immediate ones that brought some land from me live in a couple of old school buses (they are a couple of hippies into all kinds of living off the land/food/etc.). They are neat neighbors but most of them are (good neighbors). A couple are rednecks (pardon my use of this word) but heck, they are related to me from my Dad's side, go figure. The great aunt (their maw) used to run a bar down there in the boonies and wore a 6-shooter on her waist.

It is pretty country. Unfortunately (and this is my opinion), the canoes on the river have (during the summer in particular) overwhelmed everything else on the river. I remember one time that I was curious about how many canoes they were putting into the water there (on the Niangua), and I counted over 600 canoes being put in. Way too much if you ask me. Scares a lot of the wildlife away from the river.

That's an unfortunate thing that happens to these pristine areas...the economic demands outweigh the natural resources of the area, but the area needs the money ... there are few jobs, especially since this area is about 50 miles from Springfield MO and about 50 miles from the Lake of the Ozarks (the Niangua flows into the Lake). The area has lots of retirees around, I guess that they think that the cost of living is low, and I suppose that it could considered that, but then getting services done? Eh, kind of hard to get people up there in that area to work.

Sorry I dragged on and on...take care and be safe!

Honeysuckle is very very invasive. Hard to pull up and kill out too. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #1
Cut it off @ ground level and paint the cut with glyphosate or triclopyr. Botany May 2020 #2
Thanks. I'll give it a shot. I don't object to chemicals, after all, isn't everything pretty well SWBTATTReg May 2020 #3
If you are getting either the glyphosate or the triclopyr get the concentrate ... Botany May 2020 #4
Thanks, I'm in the Ozarks, so I'm just going to let the native plants take back over... SWBTATTReg May 2020 #10
make sure that the plants that move back in are native .... Botany May 2020 #11
Thanks, will do. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #12
You might want to try some Blackjack Oaks Botany May 2020 #14
Thank you! We have quite a selection of oaks, as well as hickory and ash, and other odds and ends. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #15
R you close to the Buffalo River? Botany May 2020 #16
Located next to the Niangua river, about a mile from the back exit/entrance to Bennett Springs SWBTATTReg May 2020 #17
Buckthorn is a fucking scourge. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #5
Another plant brought in by the landscape/nursery industry .... lesser celandine Botany May 2020 #6
i've never seen that plant; I think we're too cold for it here. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #7
Sorry it is "Nature's Best Hope." The Living Landscape is a good one too. Botany May 2020 #8
Minnesota, Zone 4. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #9
Vinca is the unwelcome invader in my garden. steventh May 2020 #13
Ardisia, Chinese tallow trees, and Mexican petunias are what I am fighting csziggy May 2020 #18
Latest Discussions»Culture Forums»Gardening»The Familiar Plants and A...»Reply #17