Asheville Watchdog on MSN
Answer Man: Is kudzu growth worse after Hurricane Helene? North Carolina Education Lottery’s ads beyond annoying?
Today’s round of questions, my smart-aleck replies and the real answers: Question: As someone who enjoys hiking in the ...
The so-called “vine that ate the South” is slowly devouring the woods around Art Center Waco. Kudzu vines are strangling trees on the slope overlooking the Bosque River, just a tenth of a mile from ...
Kudzu, a Japanese vine originally brought to North Carolina in the late 1800s, is an invasive species that spreads rapidly, taking over resources that other plants need to survive. It can cause ...
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (WSPA) — Volunteers with the Trees Coalition have been busy ridding the area of kudzu. Chief Meteorologist Christy Henderson recently joined them on kudzu patrol in Spartanburg.
Kudzu is probably the South's most famous invasive species, and anybody who's driven around down here probably knows it can grow anywhere, was widely and deliberately planted to fight erosion, and ...
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — One of the country’s most notorious invasive plants is expected to become a major pest throughout the Midwest. A study published earlier this year by researchers at Purdue ...
Nancy Basket lives, breathes and eats kudzu. Yes, eats. She adds kudzu to her salads and uses kudzu blossoms for jam. She also turns the plant into paper and fiber for baskets and is about to get a ...
Kudzu, the nightmare weed that gobbled the South, is disappearing. Slowly, inexorably, the scientists, foresters, farmers and goats — yes, goats — are gaining the upper hand on the slinky, creepy ...
Across the road from Norman Wilder Forest, it looks like another planet. A hillside is covered in bright green lumps, all blanketed in the same thick mat of leaves. Those lumps used to be trees. Now, ...
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