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Help! Friends bought house overgrown garden

(48 Posts)
HeavenLeigh Sun 04-Aug-24 11:25:02

Just that really, the garden she has is quite big but…. Is very overgrown mostly brambles thistles she wants to do it all herself but really does not know the best tools to have to start gardening. Wanted me to ask all you lovely gardeners which tools are best to get to start first with the brambles. Would it be a strimmer. Or long handled garden shears ? Which would be better. As you can guess she’s just starting out. Any advice will be helpful! She’s adamant she doesn’t want a gardener

SparklyGrandma Mon 05-Aug-24 12:19:38

I had four feet deep brambles removed when I started gardening.
Tiny tips from the underground bramble roots pop up now and again. I always went out with a nail scissors and snipped them off as soon as they appeared.

Bazza Mon 05-Aug-24 12:23:26

We moved into an old house when we were young, it was almost derelict and although the garden wasn’t too bad, there were a load of brambles in the borders. Cutting them down wasn’t too bad but you need to get the roots out to stop them regrowing. The only way I could do this was to borrow the builder’s pick axe. The brambles never returned and I found it quite therapeutic.

heavenlyheath Mon 05-Aug-24 13:02:01

Get a man in to clear it

Sennelier1 Mon 05-Aug-24 14:00:54

All of the above sound like good advice! Let me add that to do a garden&party week-end can help a lot toget started! Invite some friends to work together in the garden, offer a shower and then drinks + maybe BBQ 😊

rocketship Mon 05-Aug-24 15:17:52

By the time she buys some of the equipment mentioned above, I feel it might be cheaper in the long run to hire the job out and a whole lot easier.
Good luck to her in any case.

cc Mon 05-Aug-24 15:26:30

I'd also suggest that That HeavenLeigh's friend get a gardener to clear it for her. She'd need to dig out all the roots to get rid of the brambles and (depending on what she wants to do with it) dig it over either manually or with a machine.

grandtanteJE65 Mon 05-Aug-24 15:34:37

Don't waste your time cutting up stuff and putting it in bags, unless your dump insists on this.

It is far easier just to load up a trailer with the rubbish and take it down to the dump.

Unless you don't know anyone with a car and trailer!

Lilyflower Mon 05-Aug-24 16:45:30

We had to do this when moving into a house a few years ago. The above tips are great. I’d add that compost bags from garden centres are usually tough and very good weed containers and are not too big to fit into a car boot either. They are even easier to use if you use them to line a pop up fabric/plastic garden bin. The bin provides a nice wide neck for throwing in weeds.

Beware of using root weeds like dandelions to compost down as even a little bit surviving will grow a new plant. Ditto brambles.

My DH has found salt, the sort you sprinkle on paths (you can get it from garden centres), deters persistent weeds like horse tails. He’s put a layer under our gravel and it works quite well.

pascal30 Mon 05-Aug-24 17:07:18

She should also be aware that brambles spread underground quite a distance.. She really needs to get rid of the roots..

LJP1 Mon 05-Aug-24 22:31:36

Hire a brush cutter (tackles larger, tougher growth than strimmers) from a local firm. They are motorised so little pushing, chops well so pieces can be raked into the side / along the bottom of a hedge (best)/ piles for making a compost heap (rather lengthy but better than burning and useful later). You can tame a quarter of an acre of brush a day without much trouble.

Good luck and have fun! sunshine

OnwardandUpward Mon 05-Aug-24 23:22:51

Borrow some goats for a while?

merlotgran Mon 05-Aug-24 23:26:31

Do be careful if tempted to leave cut foliage as a mulch as it provides perfect winter cover for vermin.

It’s always better to clear it away before using cardboard or landscape fabric to suppress re growth.

Cadenza123 Tue 06-Aug-24 07:04:30

Your friend should pay someone to clear and dig out the brambles. Clearing is one thing, getting rid of the debris is something else.

FranA Tue 06-Aug-24 08:08:37

Borrow a goat. They eat anything.

Casdon Tue 06-Aug-24 09:42:51

Cadenza123

Your friend should pay someone to clear and dig out the brambles. Clearing is one thing, getting rid of the debris is something else.

I agree. There’s no pleasure or satisfaction in removing brambles. A professional with the right tools can do in one day what it would take a lone gardener months to do. With a new garden it’s really important to mix the pleasure with the hard work, if it were my garden I’d have it all professionally cleared, then mulch and landscape first. I’ve learned my lesson from years of battling to stay on top of the weeds but my gardening has transformed since using weed control fabric and Strulch.

OnwardandUpward Tue 06-Aug-24 12:46:17

Exactly and they're cute too! Much more fun than dealing with brambles yourself! grin

HattieTopper12345 Tue 06-Aug-24 12:50:23

I would start by spraying pure white vinegar with rock salt in it all over the garden with a 5 litre sprayer. When everything has died off she can rake all the dead stuff up and bag it for the tip. I would not recommend putting it in the garden waste bin as it has been sprayed with weed killer. Then when all that stuff has gone she can go over it with a lawn mower and a strimmer. Much easier than cutting down live grasses etc.

OnwardandUpward Tue 06-Aug-24 13:58:34

Is that known as a weed killer? Much better than nasty chemicals!

HattieTopper12345 Tue 06-Aug-24 14:33:52

OnwardandUpward

Is that known as a weed killer? Much better than nasty chemicals!

Yes it is good for killing weeds and getting rid of ants. I always add a cup of rock salt to 5 litres of water in my spear and jackson sprayer.

OnwardandUpward Tue 06-Aug-24 14:44:25

Thanks for the tip! @Hattietopper12345

Casdon Tue 06-Aug-24 16:04:13

Just to say I wouldn’t use salt on an area of the garden I later planned to plant up with things of my choice, because it stays in the soil, and they won’t do well - they could die, depending on how much build up of salt there is. I use it on paths and patios, and it is effective, but at a cost to the soil.

OnwardandUpward Tue 06-Aug-24 16:20:38

I wonder if using salt and vinegar is safe for my pets? I don't mind smelling like a fish and chip shop haha.