this popped up in my pasture in a big way around a huge live oak tree. Gets very little sun under there. What is it and how do I kill it without hurting my live oak tree?



OnlyForNow said:
Not nut grass.
Quote:
this popped up in my pasture in a big way around a huge live oak tree. Gets very little sun under there. What is it and how do I kill it without hurting my live oak tree?
Apache said:Quote:
this popped up in my pasture in a big way around a huge live oak tree. Gets very little sun under there. What is it and how do I kill it without hurting my live oak tree?
Curious why your first instinct was to try and kill it before you knew what it was?
It is a native sedge and there are dozens of species in Texas that hybridize so it's difficult to say which.
They are shade tolerant, get by on little water & evergreen. Birds eat the seeds & it's a food source for beneficial insects.
Quote:
Because it gets very thick and difficult to mow
Apache said:Quote:
Because it gets very thick and difficult to mow
The easiest solution is don't mow it!
If this pasture is being kept like a giant backyard & not for livestock, then you should just mulch around it as there is nothing better than sedge that will grow there.
HTownAg98 said:
Tell her to stick to making sandwiches and leave the range management to people that know what they're doing. A pasture that is manicured does not look natural at all.
Texaspainter said:Apache said:Quote:
Because it gets very thick and difficult to mow
The easiest solution is don't mow it!
If this pasture is being kept like a giant backyard & not for livestock, then you should just mulch around it as there is nothing better than sedge that will grow there.
yea but the wifey likes to mow and keep things "manicured"
milner79 said:Texaspainter said:Apache said:Quote:
Because it gets very thick and difficult to mow
The easiest solution is don't mow it!
If this pasture is being kept like a giant backyard & not for livestock, then you should just mulch around it as there is nothing better than sedge that will grow there.
yea but the wifey likes to mow and keep things "manicured"
There's a lot to be said for that.
BoerneGator said:
Except she wants "him" to keep it manicured..... big difference.
Texaspainter said:BoerneGator said:
Except she wants "him" to keep it manicured..... big difference.
Who TF said that my wife wants ME to keep it manicured? If you would read the post you are commenting on then you would clearly see that I said SHE likes to mow. My wife could work circles around most of you keyboard tough guy warriors. Sheesh......
Can't even ask a simple question on here anymore without it turning into a bash fest.....
You know nothing about me or my wife, so politely get out of my thread.
96ags said:Texaspainter said:BoerneGator said:
Except she wants "him" to keep it manicured..... big difference.
Who TF said that my wife wants ME to keep it manicured? If you would read the post you are commenting on then you would clearly see that I said SHE likes to mow. My wife could work circles around most of you keyboard tough guy warriors. Sheesh......
Can't even ask a simple question on here anymore without it turning into a bash fest.....
You know nothing about me or my wife, so politely get out of my thread.
Might need a little more coffee and maybe you will get the joke.
Don't think anyone was bagging on your wife.
Texaspainter said:
Because it gets very thick and difficult to mow

. OnlyForNow said:
All sedges have triangular stems, but nut sedge has wider leaves/blades, and the seed head is a fair bit different - even though we can't clearly see this seed head it's not a nut sedge head.
I'm guessing it's
Texas sedge or Cherokee sedge
Leggo My Elko said:
I'd leave it. Those grasses have nice roots getting water down in the zone helping the Live Oak.