The Russian Curse

Turn and run!  Nothing can stop them.  Around every river and canal their power is growing.
Stamp them out!  We must destroy them. They infiltrate each city with their thick dark warning odour*.


Plant hunters have over the centuries introduced many beautiful plants to our gardens but they have also brought in others that have, as they escaped from its confines, become troublesome weeds.  Japanese Knotweed, Fallopia japonica, creates problems by damaging river banks and pushing up through concrete, even entering houses; Himalayan Balsam, Impatiens glandulifera, is pretty enough with their hooked pink and white flowers but smothers native plants.  Both are difficult and costly to eradicate.  But the one that can cause the most trouble - and is undoubtedly the most impressive - is Giant Hogweed.

Long ago in the Russian hills, a Victorian explorer found the regal hogweed by a marsh ... he came home to London and made a present of the hogweed to the Royal Gardens at Kew*.

Giant Hogweed, Heracleum mantegazzianum, was introduced to Britain from the Caucasus in  Victorian times and soon became a popular addition to parks and gardens for, although similar in appearance to our native Hogweed, Heracleum sphondylium, these were giants in every way.  Huge flower heads above equally large leaves reaching way into the sky - up to twenty feet or more in exceptional specimens - were something to marvel at. A hardy perennial, the plants shot up over the course of just one summer adding to its popularity, although it can be a few years before the plant flowers after which it dies.  With  up to 100,000 seeds from each plant, it soon multiplied and before long had found its way back to the marshy land adjacent to rivers and canals as in its homeland.

I wonder how long it took the Victorian gardeners to discover the problems associated with the plant for it not only spreads rapidly, it also is extremely toxic.  Covered in sharp bristles that scratch the skin it is the sap from the plant that can cause major injury.  Skin contact with the sap when exposed to sunlight results in severe dermatitis: itching and redness develop into blisters and dark wheals.  These can last for several years.  Contact with the eyes is even more dangerous for permanent blindness can follow.

So what do you do if you find Giant Hogweed in your garden apart from turn and run?  It can be treated with weed killer and the ideal time to do this is when the plants have a large leaf area but before they flower.  It is essential not to handle the plant at any time - even when it is dead - for every part of it including its roots will injure you.  If you are tempted to carry out control yourself (and it may be wiser to call in a specialist eradication company (please, not me!)) then you must wear a complete coverall and full face and eye protection.  You also need to remember that the clothing will also be contaminated and should be destroyed.
Fortunately, Giant Hogweed is rarely encountered in gardens.  You are more likely to find it growing in waste places in the wild and it may be wise to report its presence to your local environmental agency.  Attitudes toward it vary from country to country for this is not just a British pest - it is found in many other temperate regions of the world including the USA and Canada.
Perhaps at this point, I should remind you all that the majority of garden plants are harmless enough and that gardening and plants give a huge amount of pleasure.  Happy gardening!

* The Return of the Giant Hogweed: lyrics by Genesis, 1971




 

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Comments

  1. I have a soft spot for it because we used to play all day by the river when I was young and I loved the huge umbrellas of Giant Hogweed.
    We never picked it, but I remember someone cutting a section to use as a "blow-pipe" and getting a very sore face!

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  2. I have to admit that I've always rather liked it too and still get a bit excited when I see them. I suppose it's because they are so dramatic an also so evil!

    I hadn't realised until quite recently just how dangerous they are. I read in Wikipedia (where else?) that in Germany, where it is widespread, over 16000 people had to be treated for it in just one year...

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  3. We don't have anything quite so spectacular as giant hogwart here -- no rivers, mainly. However, I'm currently fighting a battle with another extremely invasive import from China, the so-called "Tree of Heaven" (Ailanthus altissima) -- there's one next door in the neighbor's yard, and my yard is literally all over seedlings. They are fast growing, up to 10 feet in 2 years. The roots secrete a natural herbicide that eliminates the competition. Their sap stinks and the wood stinks to high heaven when it burns, so you can't use it for firewood. You have to poison one to get rid of it, and you have to kill it roots and all, or it just comes right back. It's right on a par with kudzu (Pueraria lobata) in terms of obnoxiousness and invasiveness. Thankfully, we don't have kudzu where I live. My brother used to live in Mississippi, and he wrestled with it constantly -- that stuff can grow a foot in a day.

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  4. We do grow Ailanthus in this country but I wasn't aware of the problems it is causing elsewhere in the world. I've just done a search on it and, yes, they are now giving out warnings for the UK too. With temperatures rising they think it will become a major pest here too although at the moment there are no controls to stop people from planting it.

    As is often the case, I expect the proverbial stable door will be shut far too late!

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