
Gardeners urged to AVOID plant that's the UK's next Japanese knotweed – it's expensive & can cause legal neighbour rows
It's been dubbed the 'new Japanese knotweed' after owners have been left paying thousands in removal costs.
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Gardeners are being urged to avoid a 'stressful' plant that has been dubbed the 'new Japanese knotweed'
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Not only can it cost thousands in repairs, but it can even lead to legal issues with neighbours too
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Running bamboo spreads aggressively through underground rhizomes, sending out new shoots and canes away from the parent plant
Credit: Jon Barton MD of Root Barrier Store
Not only is it 'stressful' and 'expensive' for those who find it in their
But certain varieties can become highly invasive if not properly contained, as they embed their root systems far and wide underneath the
Some many have unknowingly planted the unruly species in their gardens, or even inherited the problem after purchasing a property, which has then wreaked havoc on their own and neighbouring properties.
As well as this, it can also cause legal issues with neighbours too.
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So what is the plant in question you ask? Running bamboo.
Gardening experts at
And according to gardening pro Chris Bonnett, running bamboo varieties can travel up to 10 metres from the parent plant.
Running bamboo is a type of bamboo that spreads aggressively through underground rhizomes, sending out new shoots and canes away from the parent plant.
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These rhizomes can travel long distances underground, making it difficult to contain their spread.
As a result, Chris warned: 'If you're growing running varieties, it's a good idea to keep them in pots and planters in order to control the growth and spread."
Map reveals worst areas for Japanese knotweed with fears plant will wipe thousands off house prices
Such running varieties have proved a nightmare for many
As reported by
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Gardening mistakes that could get you fined
Gardening experts over at Toolstation have revealed the garden laws you need to be aware of not breaking.
While some of these laws could land you with a fine of up to £20,000 in extreme cases, a friendly chat with your neighbours can usually resolve any issues.
Tree removal and pruning
: If you have a tree in your garden you want to get rid of you better think twice and do your research.
The gardening experts reveal: 'If one neighbour wishes to remove or heavily prune a tree that the other neighbour values, disputes can arise over the impact on the view, shade, or privacy. "
While it might cause a row, if it is in your property boundary it is ultimately your choice, unless it has a Tree Protection Order on it.
'But, some trees may be protected by a Tree Protection Order which makes it an offence to uproot, top or destroy them, the experts warn.
The maximum fine for breaking this law is £20,000, so make sure you double check if it does have a TPO.
You can find out by contacting your local council for a map that shows this information. Alternatively, you can ask to speak with your local tree officer.
Property boundaries and fences
: One of the main causes of neighbours falling out is through arguing over property boundaries and fencing.
To avoid this situation, the gardening pros recommend checking the deeds of your property to determine the correct boundaries
'Most of the time, it's easy to determine who owns the fence as the fence posts will usually be on the owners side," they add.
'Additionally, the height of fences or hedges can cause disputes between neighbours if one party feels the height has exceeded the two metre guidance.
"Hedges and fences should be no more than two metres high, and you could be asked by the council to take them down if a neighbour complains about the height.
"Luckily, standard fence sizes are less than two metres tall so you shouldn't have a problem.'
Garden structures and additions
: A pergola is the perfect addition to a garden if you want somewhere to relax in the shade.
But if it obstructs your neighbour's view or violates local building regulations it could cause a dispute, as can sheds and other garden structures.
'If you're not sure, have a chat with your neighbours to let them know what you're planning and, if there's an issue, get in touch with your local council who can give you more guidance," advise the gardening experts.
Overhanging branches and plants
: 'When branches, vines, or roots from one neighbour's tree or plant extend into the neighbouring property, it can lead to disagreements over potential damage to structures, blocked views, or the burden of maintenance," reveal the pros.
However, it's important to note you can only trim overhanging branches up to the boundary of your property otherwise, it could be seen as trespassing.
You can climb into the tree to carry out the work if needed, but only on your property and make sure to stay on your side of the fence if you don't have permission to enter your neighbours garden.
Following this, a bamboo survey of her outside space revealed that the plant's rhizomes had spread across her entire garden.
Subsequently, Emily Grant, director at
Buyers need to consider the risk of a legal case from a neighbour if the bamboo encroaches into their property
Emily Grant
She warned: 'Nobody wants to inherit a stressful and expensive issue when they buy a property, but this is frequently happening with
"There is no legal framework to protect buyers, as there is for Japanese knotweed.'
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She also explained: 'In addition to potential damage to their own property and garden, buyers need to consider the risk of a legal case from a
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The Most Invasive Plants in the UK
Several non-native species have been introduced to the UK over the years. These are the most problematic plants to look out for in your garden.
Japanese Knotweed
It is an offence against the 1981 Wildlife & Countryside Act to grow Japanese Knotweed.
It might not be poisonous, it is extremely fast-growing and can seriously damage buildings, paving and structures.
Giant Hogweed
It might look rather attractive, but Giant Hogweed can be pretty dangerous.
The plant's sap is toxic and can cause burns or blisters if it comes into contact with the skin.
Himalayan Balsam
Himalayan Balsam is another plant you need to keep your eyes on.
It produces an array of pretty pink flowers, but one plant is said to be able to spread 2,500 seeds, that are "launched" over a distance of seven metres.
And like other invasive plants, Himalayan Balsam wipes out other plants, growing up to three metres high, drawing out sunlight for smaller plants.
New Zealand Pigmyweed
New Zealand Pigmyweed is an aquatic plant that can cause havoc in still water, such as lakes and ponds or even slow moving water, such as canals.
It also impacts animals, such as frogs, fish and newts, as it can form a dense mat on the water's surface, therefore starving the water of oxygen.
Rhododendron
An incredibly beautiful plant, loved my many gardeners, but the Rhododendron is technically classed as an invasive specie due to its rapid growth in woodlands.
Unlike other invasive species mentioned on this list, it's not recommended to completely remove or kill Rhododendrons but instead take extra care to manage their growth, trimming and pruning them regularly.

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The Irish Sun
2 days ago
- The Irish Sun
The 3 best privacy fences to buy for your garden – including stylish B&Q buy that will last winter
IT seems that everyone and their nan is talking about privacy fences this year. Long gone are the days of talking to your neighbours while sunbathing, now we'll do anything to keep them out. Advertisement 7 We tried three of the best privacy fences to keep nosy neighbours out Credit: supplied But with over 40 million videos of privacy fences on TikTok alone, it can be hard to navigate which way is the best. So Fabulous Reporter Leanne Hall and Associate Editor Rebecca Miller decided to put three of the most popular methods to the test. While Rebecca has an 80ft fence in her back garden to take care of, Leanne has a front garden on a main road in London - both are subject to prying eyes they'd rather keep out. Ivy Trellis 7 The fake ivy was a cheap and effective method Credit: supplied The ivy trellis has become a popular way to give fences an update without forking out thousands on new fence panelling. Advertisement READ MORE ON GARDENING The one I picked from AliExpress has a flexible backing which is perfect for me as it's easy to hang on the iron bars of my fence using cable ties. I bought three packs of the This made covering my side of the fence cost just £15.84 - a bargain if you ask me. Fed up with passersby and dreaded Lime bike users watching my every move in the garden, I was eager to get the privacy panels up. Advertisement Most read in Fabulous It's a simple job and only needs one person to complete. The ivy is super light, making it easy to hold on to while you secure it with cable ties. While you can tell the ivy is fake, it still looked pleasant for the price and with some extra plants potted around, it looks perfect in the summer. Most importantly, it kept neighbours out from seeing inside my garden. Advertisement 7 You can't see through from the outside either Credit: supplied I hate my new build garden being overlooked so found a 5 METRE privacy fence to block out nosy neighbours for under £30 Bamboo Screening 7 The picket fence offered no privacy for either garden Credit: RM Another popular budget-friendly fence covering is using bamboo screening. Rebecca decided to use the which did the job effortlessly. Advertisement The Rebecca used two screens to cover her side of fence making the hack cost just under £90. To get it up, you'll need long screws and mushroom caps to attach the screen to the existing picket fence every foot or so along. Because of its size, you'll need an extra pair of hands to get it done; one to screw and one to roll it out and hold it tight. After 10 minutes, both screens were up. Advertisement Rebecca adds: "As for how it screen isn't entirely opaque; there are tiny gaps between the bamboo rods that let some light through. "So unless you and your neighbour have a staring competition, you can't see them. "Plus, when the sun hits it, it leaves a beautiful dappled effect across the grass. I was pleasantly surprised at how good it looks." It also comes with a one-year guarantee to make sure it lasts through winter. Advertisement 7 The finished result! Now I can potter around my garden freely without my neighbours looking Credit: RM How high can a garden fence be? Despite what many people think a garden fence can be as high as 100m but you need to get planning permission for any fence taller than 2m. Any fence under 2m does not need planning permission. However, there are some complications to this. If you are thinking about front garden fences, restrictions state that fences alongside a driveway can be a maximum of 1m or 3ft. You would need to get planning permission for putting a trellis on a fence of 2m. But, if any plant that you grow on that trellis exceeds 2m, you do not need to obtain a permit for the Shower Curtains 7 Putting it up was super easy and took just five minutes Credit: supplied So I decided to take matters into my own hands and buy a shower curtain from Amazon for just £10. I went for a design that featured luscious, thick greenery and a gorgeous lake in the centre so I could attempt to feel like I was on Lake Como while in the heart of London. Advertisement While many people who have shared the hack online have used a staple gun to attach it to their fence, I had to opt for a different method. Because my front garden has iron bars - I used the hooks that came with the shower curtain and put them through each of the holes. It instantly blocked out the stares from passersby and was much more pleasant to look at than the line of Lime bikes outside my house. Although it can pass as looking quite nice in pictures, in real life it looks like exactly what it is - a shower curtain in your garden. Advertisement But if you're looking for a quick, cheap and effective method this might be the one for you. 7 Fed up with nosy neighbours, Fabulous reporter Leanne Hall tried the viral shower curtain hack Credit: SUPPLIED


RTÉ News
2 days ago
- RTÉ News
Taoiseach 'deeply moved' by story of Hiroshima survivor in Japan
When the US warplane dropped a 4,400kg atomic bomb on Hiroshima, and 43 seconds later it detonated 600 metres above the city, eight-year-old Teruko Yahata was playing in her garden on what was a sunny August morning in 1945. The first indication of the enormity of what had just happened, she told Taoiseach Micheál Martin on Friday, was that the sky was suddenly and dramatically illuminated, in what she described as a blinding "bluish-white" light. The second indication was the rising black/grey nuclear cloud, which Ms Yahata said was "as if the heavens had become a huge flower". Then the force of the blast raced through her district, more than two kilometres from the point of detonation, and knocked her to the ground, causing her to lose consciousness. The atomic bomb dropped by the B-29 warplane, Enola Gay, triggered a powerful shockwave that levelled almost every structure within a radius of 1.5km. The intense heat it generated in-turn set off a firestorm that engulfed district after district. It is estimated that 70,000 people were obliterated immediately by the blast, with another 70,000 dying from 'radiation sickness' over the following months. More than half of the city's population was wiped out. Hiroshima had become the first city in the world to be targeted by a nuclear weapon and, to my amazement, Ms Yahata was steadily relating her incredible eye-witness testimony nearly eight decades later. I had spotted an unassuming, bespectacled woman, wearing a white cardigan and a pearl necklace over her dark dress, slipping into the office of Hiroshima Mayor, Kazumi Matsui, while Mr Martin was speaking with Japanese journalists. I'm not sure whether it was her purposeful stride that caught my attention, or the fact that she then carefully laid out a map of Hiroshima on a table. Either way, something made me enquire about this quiet and stylish woman at the back of the room. An official whispered to me: "She's one of the hibakusha" - a collective term which translates as "bomb-affected-people". Ms Yahata was introduced to the Taoiseach, and she first pointed out on her map where the epicentre, or more correctly hypocenter, of the blast was located, and how that related to her suburb. She had a strong voice and was speaking in English - a language she had mastered at the age of 83, so that she could dispense with translators and reach a wider audience directly. This small detail gave me a big insight into the petite, strong-willed woman sitting in front of us. Ms Yahata said she regained consciousness quickly after the atomic blast on 6 August 1945, and heard her mother's voice calling out for her. Like her city, Ms Yahata's childhood had just been blown to smithereens by the blast, and she'd now been catapulted into a nightmarish nuclear world. She told us that when she saw her mother: "I noticed that there were fragments of glass sticking out of her back, and her white dress was now stained bloody red." She witnessed her father carrying her great-grandmother on his back as he escaped their house. "There was so much smoke in there, that I could barely see the inside of the house. It had been turned upside down, and the shattered glass from the sliding doors was everywhere," she said. Ms Yahata remembered her mother praying as they left their ruined family home: "It was silent outside, and virtually all of the houses surrounding ours were destroyed." There was also fear, if not terror. "We thought that there was sure to be a second and, perhaps, a third bombing." Given that threat, and the intense destruction all around them, Ms Yahata's family decided to flee to the mountains where they had friends. But hunger stalked the land there, as the structures of society as they'd known it, were gone. Her direct testimony of eking out a life in a nuclear winter had a powerful impact on everyone in the room, including the Taoiseach. Mr Martin recounted afterwards how he'd been horrified as Ms Yahata described the hellish scenes she'd witnessed, including encountering people suffering from radiation burns with "skin peeling-off their arms". The Taoiseach said he had been deeply moved when Ms Yahata spoke of how her family, and so many others, faced starvation in those dark months after the bombing. He said she told him how, even to this day, she attaches huge significance to a bowl of rice - as she's never forgotten being given one by a stranger when she was starving as a child. Mr Martin said the purpose of his visit to Hiroshima had been to express sympathy to the victims, such as Ms Yahata, but also to reaffirm Ireland's strong and long-standing commitment to disarmament and denuclearisation. Against the backdrop of the bombing of Iran by Israel and the US, with the stated aim of destroying its capacity to make nuclear weapons, Mr Martin described the world today as "a very dangerous place." "If Iran… was ever to secure a nuclear weapon, then the prospect of proliferation for the nuclear weapons within the Middle East, for example, would grow very significantly," he contended. The Taoiseach suggested that there was a paradox about humanity, given its ability to exhibit both "incredible ingenuity" and "profound stupidity" as evidenced by its ever increasing capacity to develop weapons which could destroy the planet. "I was at the AI [Artificial Intelligence] summit in Paris… one person spoke about the application of AI to warfare, which would really be on a different level altogether, in terms of the destruction that could be wreaked on humankind." While in Hiroshima, the Taoiseach spent most of his time in the company of the city's Mayor, Kazumi Matsui. In blistering midday sunshine, they laid a wreath and stood together at the cenotaph for the victims, a sculptured arc designed to provide shelter for the souls of those killed by the bomb. In the near distance, we could see the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, commonly called the A-Bomb Dome. This iconic building was left ruined by the nuclear strike but somehow is still standing - quite a feat given it was just 160m from the hypocentre of the explosion. The Taoiseach said he learned a lot from Mayor Matsui - not just about what happened in August 1945, but also how the population recovered from the collective trauma. "I think the mayor made a very good point when he said to me… that you have to break the cycle of hate. "And that's the key issue, that the people of Japan had a huge hate visited upon them. You must learn to stop hating, and if you can do that, then you can build peace," he said. 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It clearly is a small place, just as it is a vulnerable place, as Ms Yahata has testified for 80 years.


Irish Examiner
3 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Peter Dowdall: Garden design is more about editing than creating, so observe what it needs
All too often, we get completely engrossed in colour. And it's understandable. Who doesn't love the riot of blooms in May, June and July, when the garden is bursting with life and everything feels fresh and full of promise? But in our enthusiasm for flower colour, it's easy to lose sight of something more fundamental, the actual design of the garden. Colour is fleeting. It comes and goes with the seasons, often vanishing overnight in the face of wind or rain. What remains, though, are the bones of the garden, its structure, its textures and its more subtle touches. One of the lessons I've learned over the years is the importance of observing before acting. There's a reason why Japanese gardens are so popular; there's a calm, reflective tone that runs through the best Japanese garden design, and it begins not with a spade or a plant list, but with time spent simply looking. Colour is fleeting. It comes and goes with the seasons. Watching how the light moves across the garden throughout the day, noticing how the wind flows through it, listening to the way it sounds, these are all part of the design process. It's an approach that will pay you many dividends in the long run. Let's not forget what gardens are all about, relaxing and just 'being' so go out into the garden, don't pull a weed or clip a plant, just sit for a while, really take it in. What draws your eye? Where do you feel comfortable? Are there parts of the garden that feel awkward or underused? When you stop thinking in terms of colours and start thinking in terms of space and experience, you begin to see the garden differently. You see the relationships between shapes and heights, between open areas and more enclosed ones. You start to understand how structure supports everything else. Colour, as glorious as it is, is temporary. A garden will never be as colourful in December and January as it is in high summer, but that doesn't mean it can't still be interesting. A good garden should hold your attention all year round, even in its quietest moments, and it's in winter, when the flowers have all but disappeared, that the importance of texture, structure, and positioning comes into its own. Look at how a gnarled tree trunk catches the low winter light, or how a clump of ornamental grass sways in the wind or stands solid, frozen by frost. Notice the curve of a path, the shape of a shrub, or the contrast between a smooth stone and a bed of moss. These are the things that stay with us through the seasons, quietly doing their work in the background while the more show-off elements take their turn in the spotlight at different times Incorporating interest into a garden doesn't always mean adding more. Sometimes it means removing what's unnecessary so that what remains has space to breathe. Empty areas are sometimes as important as the planted ones. They allow the eye to rest and give a sense of calm. Again, this is something that Japanese gardens do so well. Their use of empty space, their appreciation of ageing and imperfection, and their commitment to balance and subtlety all come from a place of deep observation and respect for the natural world. If you're thinking about making changes to your garden, or even just wondering why certain parts feel off or uninspiring, try taking a different approach. Instead of planning your next trip to the garden centre with flower colour in mind, go out into the garden with a cup of tea and a notebook. Walk around. Sit in different spots. Look at the garden from the inside of the house as well as from the garden path. Ask yourself what works and what doesn't, not in terms of colour, but in terms of flow, style and feeling. This act of slowing down and observing is something I've had to remind myself of over and over again. I love plants, and I love the bold impact of seasonal flowers, but I also know that without structure, those moments are too brief to carry the garden alone. When you start thinking in terms of structure, form, texture, and then colour on top, everything begins to settle into place. In many ways, designing a garden is more about editing than creating. The elements are already there: the light, the soil, the wind, the existing plants. Our job is to notice them, understand them, and work with them gently and as the Japanese approach teaches us, doing less, but doing it thoughtfully, often leads to more. So, before you plant another tray of petunias or dash to the shop for something in full bloom, take a moment. What is your garden telling you? What does it need? What does it already have that you haven't quite noticed yet? Got a gardening question for Peter Dowdall? Email gardenquestions@