MsDoe said: I've generally heard the problematic plants described as
"invasive non-native". Maybe it's easier just to call it a weed. There are a few invasive natives, but they're really rarely trouble makers.
We have a native thistle which is not a problem, but also have the non-native scotch thistle. They can be invasive, taking over and crowding out native species.
Like Stone, I do let a few thistles grow because the birds and bugs love them, but have to be careful not to leave too many.
Siberian elm trees are a considered a "weed tree" here, an example of an invasive non-native that can crowd out the locals.
In parts of California, Eucalyptus are considered undesirable invasives!
purpleinopp said: As a gardening term, "invasive" has a specific meaning. It is a plant is found growing outside of its habitat of origin AND displacing natives to the point that the ecosystem is altered. A plant can either be native, or invasive, but never both. They are mutually exclusive terms, opposites, and both are subject to the context of the location.
As far as weeds go, I consider many of the plants I see for sale at stores to be weeds. Asparagus fern, Vinca major, spider plants, to name just a few. Some of them were given this personal designation after I purchased them and they ended up being way too spready for my taste.
I would never call a native plant growing in its habitat a weed, but do consider many to be too exuberant to submit to tame cultivation. Many turf lovers would look at a "cottage garden" and see a bunch of weeds. Many would look at a field of wildflowers as a bunch of weeds. The term weed is subjective and can be applied to native or non-native plants at the whim of the speaker. Anyone may use the term however they want.
So many of the plants commonly referred to as weeds in the US are edible. They are called weeds for various reasons. The most common reason is that they grow well in agricultural fields. Nothing but the subject crop is allowed to grow so they must be identified and killed by some kind of 'cide.
The second most common reason is that they are edible. If people are eating their weeds instead of buying every bite at the grocery store, that's not good for BIG AG. They lose multiple times because you didn't buy those bites of food AND you didn't buy their 'cide that promises to kill your supposed weed. You didn't buy grass seed, weed'n'feed, a string trimmer, edger, and maybe not even a mower.
This kind of psychological social pressure is very effective. Nobody wants to be the crackpot in their neighborhood known for "eating weeds" or "letting their lawn go to weeds." You're supposed to tend your monoculture of sod like a good little rule-follower, buying the products and food that somebody else grew, every step of the way.
If you are in the US and don't believe you're tending a lawn because "they" said you should, you might want to read "The Lawn: A History of an American Obsession by Virginia Scott Jenkins. Not that there's anything wrong with wanting or tending a lawn, but the pressure is so complete that so many people feel bad, inferior, or like a failure if their lawn doesn't look perfect.
I have never been to Australia, but this is my view of things from the US.
Horto_soil20 said: Speaking about lawns "buffalo grass" is very invasive. Kikuyu grass is the worse invasive weed and grass we have. I would not recommend this type of grass to an old lady who wants a low weed maintenance garden. I have Buffalo grass and it enjoys any kind of soil but the maintenance is high. It is a good summer grass but it is also a weed. Dichondra is kidney weed and that can grow and stay in your garden if you want a good looking garden keep Dichondra in your garden. I think the term weeds is a good term. And there is the obnoxious weeds which must be removed . Environmental does not matter but obnoxious does.
gardengus said: I live in a mostly agricultural area in the middle of the USA
The farmers here grow mostly corn or beans (with the occasional tomato field)
anything else is a weed to themeven corn in a bean field
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I think a ''weed'' is just a plant one does not want![]()