Goat Head weeds choking your yard? originally appeared on Dengarden. I moved to beautiful Northern Arizona about 22 years ago and loved it immediately. After living for years in the southern desert, ...
GARDEN VALLEY, Idaho — Eleven agencies from Idaho and Utah gathered on Idaho Forest Service land on Tuesday to collect moths that will be released in other areas to control invasive rush skeletonweed.
CHEYENNE, Wyo.— Herds of weed-eating goats won't be visiting the banks of Cheyenne creeks this summer. The Laramie County Weed and Pest Control District has opted to use money that has paid to hire ...
TWIN FALLS — Concerns about a noxious weed are mounting across southern Idaho. Rush skeletonweed, a perennial whose branched, woody stems may grow to three- or four-feet tall, is particularly ...
When faced with a large piece of property to landscape, some people might joke that they wished they could buy goats to handle the work. It turns out that the use of goats for controlling vegetation ...
It takes a weed whacking and comes back faster than any plant around it. The sprawling green stems spread both by seeds and by the root you just left in the ground. It’s a nonnative noxious weed ...
The Enemy: Rush skeletonweed (Chondrilla juncea L.) Strategy: This perennial plant has infested several million acres in Idaho, first found in the early 1980s as a 5-acre patch near Horseshoe Bend.