Kudzu: The Vine That Covered The South In Darkness

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  • Опубліковано 9 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 423

  • @cravensean
    @cravensean Рік тому +239

    I once told a pal, "Most parts of kudzu are edible," and she said, "Nobody wants to eat that much kudzu."

    • @metaphosV
      @metaphosV Рік тому +4

      You don't know no Chinese LOL

    • @cravensean
      @cravensean Рік тому

      Nope. I'm an ignorant monoglot who has been failed by his educational system. What's your excuse?@@metaphosV

    • @ellaboobella8770
      @ellaboobella8770 7 місяців тому +2

      Except woodchucks. Ours love the stuff. 😂

  • @ProjectPhysX
    @ProjectPhysX Рік тому +271

    Fast-groing plants are insane. I've seen this with the pumpkin plants in our garden. 30cm growth per day, you can literally see it move under the magnifying glass.

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement Рік тому +11

      Yes but pumpkin plants are good. Kudzu is of the devil.

    • @JeanneBook
      @JeanneBook Рік тому +12

      Those plants are key in the apocalypse, they would set the vibe.

    • @drillerdev4624
      @drillerdev4624 Рік тому +8

      @@direfranchement apparently it can be eaten both by humans and livestock. So maybe all we need are recipes to promote.
      What about stir fried organic beef (kudzu fed) with kudzu leaves and a side serving of roasted kudzu roots?

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement Рік тому +1

      @@drillerdev4624 No, it’s poison.

    • @safron2442
      @safron2442 Рік тому +18

      @@direfranchement No it isn't. kudzu leaves can be fried and eaten and the young stems can be peeled and eaten raw. It actually tastes pretty decent, has a mild bean/peanut flavor.

  • @deadlydingus1138
    @deadlydingus1138 Рік тому +408

    Kudzu is one of those plants that I think should be a pokemon.

  • @Obalatan2010
    @Obalatan2010 Рік тому +81

    I wish you'd also mentioned that it makes really good forage for ruminants and they can ruin even established stands in a few years. The leaves are also edible, and as you point out, the vines make good fibre for baskets, paper, or textiles. It's a good plant that needs keeping in check rather than an out-and-out noxious agent.

  • @DanGamingFan2406
    @DanGamingFan2406 Рік тому +80

    Down here in the Carolinas, that stuff is just about EVERYWHERE. Hardly an empty lot without it at least bordering the property. And in the forests along certain highways, it's all you can see! My relatives up in the mountains all say it's looks beautiful, but I know better.

    • @ledwards7171
      @ledwards7171 Рік тому +6

      Going across the mountain from Erwin Tennessee to the family homestead it just covers everything.... it's sad to see such beautiful wilderness choked out by this stuff.

  • @Endquire
    @Endquire Рік тому +225

    It seems like kudzu could be an exceptional resource that we are failing to use properly. This seems especially so as the loss of top soil and the real existential threats to agriculture loom. People really don't know how actually precarious our existence is.

    • @luddity
      @luddity Рік тому +30

      Also, it's a great way to keep your goats well-fed and happy. No herbicides needed.

    • @Rainkit
      @Rainkit Рік тому +30

      Other legumes could achieve the same results and not be horrifically invasive. This video doesn't property convey how hard it is to control this plant. Once established it takes years to eliminate and its fast growth habit means that it's almost impossible to control unless you cut it every single day. Heck, roundup doesn't kill this thing. My state's conservation department recommends Tordon 101 and Veteran 720.
      And of course once it escapes is causes massive ecological damage. I've seen state parks have to tear out entire sections of forest to control this plant, and I live in a state where the vine can only grow during summer because the winter get cold enough to kill it back to the roots. Not cold enough to kill the roots though, so it just comes back.

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 Рік тому +7

      @@Rainkitsame, I used to associate kudzu with the Deep South but it’s a real problem in Kentucky, it burns back but still once mature it will completely curtain large chunks of woodland, once it reaches the canopy of a woodland it shade everything beneath it, allowing it exponentially more coverage.
      I really think that we should be paying vastly more attention to invasive plants, it really seems vital to me, it may be too late already, but with more funding, newer tech like drones and ai to find it and ID, and gps mark it then humans deal with it BEFORE it devastates the countryside.
      Priorities.

    • @WalterWhiteFootballSharing
      @WalterWhiteFootballSharing Рік тому +9

      @@luddity Too bad America doesn't appreciate goat meat and goat cheeses. There's a lot more then that chevre in the salad we call 'goat cheese' like calling parmesano reggiano 'cow cheese' as if there aren't hundreds. Kudzu could fuel a goat industry for export I guess. We suck, the world has so much good goat cuisine. Curry goat is fire if you got jamaican neighborhoods.

    • @bmiles4131
      @bmiles4131 Рік тому +7

      @@Rainkit I was just fighting native vines in my yard all morning. When she said it’s roots go down 9 ft I was horrified. You’d have to bulldoze the area or just have goats constantly eating it (so no native plants could grow there).

  • @rklein
    @rklein Рік тому +44

    Goats, that what we used to completely and easily wipe out all of it in a 1200 acre natural area in middle Tennessee. Put a temporary fence around the area with the kudzu and put the goats in there. Problem solved. They eat it roots and all.

    • @ikeybertso
      @ikeybertso Рік тому +11

      Exactly. Kudzu is an edible and nutritious forage. Feed it to livestock.

    • @ForneverstarOfficial
      @ForneverstarOfficial 5 місяців тому +4

      Lmao ngl if they put goats all over the state/national parks it'd make them even better too 😂

    • @ravenj2400
      @ravenj2400 Місяць тому

      amen

  • @DarthVidor37
    @DarthVidor37 Рік тому +43

    Kudzu please keep these fabulous videos coming? Thank you, have a nice day.

  • @d.b.2215
    @d.b.2215 Рік тому +23

    In Vietnam we grind the root into a starchy powder (bột sắn dây) and make a drink of it. It's supposed to be "cooling" for your body (i.e. boosting the "yin" side of things), and thus is good for treating inflammation and for general cooling down in the summer.

  • @nostalgiakarlk.f.7386
    @nostalgiakarlk.f.7386 Рік тому +130

    Thank you so much for talking about this invasive and threatening species. I personally think there should be organizations here in the south dedicated to eradicating kudzu, as well as the similarly invasive English ivy.

    • @AutumnF
      @AutumnF Рік тому +7

      As a southerner , kudzu is the bane of my existence. You’ll be trying to walk through a forest and can’t go any further because of the stupidly thick kudzu. I’d gladly sign a petition to make an anti-kudzu organization lol

    • @22espec
      @22espec Рік тому +3

      Yeah, but that would need money which mean tax money and... well we all know how they love raising tax money in the south.

    • @direfranchement
      @direfranchement Рік тому +5

      Yes, let’s form an anti-Kudzu coalition.

    • @abelardogreen
      @abelardogreen Рік тому +2

      The Japanese could event kudzu killing robot. That would be nice m

    • @abelardogreen
      @abelardogreen Рік тому +1

      @@GeorgeWashingtonLaserMusket this is the second time I've done that this week. I need to change the font size on my phone.

  • @Kalisis07
    @Kalisis07 Рік тому +58

    Kudzu is literally everywhere in Georgia. I'm so used to seeing it here, it would probably be weird NOT to see it. I never heard of bees making grape tasting honey off of it though. I wanna try that out.

    • @MRB1199
      @MRB1199 Рік тому

      Im from ny I would love to see this is person ......what do ppl do down there about it ?

    • @Kalisis07
      @Kalisis07 Рік тому +3

      @@MRB1199 Most people just leave it alone. It doesn't really affect most people day to day life. It's mostly farmers and people with large plots of land

    • @EmoDKTsuchiya
      @EmoDKTsuchiya Рік тому

      Gwinnett and Walton

  • @Kiraiko44
    @Kiraiko44 Рік тому +35

    I grew up in AL and it would cover EVERYTHING if you let it, I remember entire fields and hillsides and old buildings being covered in it. They've been fighting back against it a lot more since I was a kid but it's still a problem.

    • @luddity
      @luddity Рік тому +1

      The south needs more goats to keep it pruned back.

    • @gnamedreagan9497
      @gnamedreagan9497 6 місяців тому

      The house I live in was pretty much abandoned for like 3-4 years with no on keeping it in check that stuff was covering a carport and up around the house

  • @SlapstickGenius23
    @SlapstickGenius23 Рік тому +22

    Kudzu can be made into sweets. There’s Kuzumochi, a Japanese sweet made out of the plant.

  • @rosehawke2577
    @rosehawke2577 Рік тому +23

    There's a problem with the Kudzu Bug. It doesn't just eat kudzu. It likes ANYTHING in the legume family, including green beans as I found out one year. I had no idea what this new to me bug was that were covering my vines. I try to garden organically as much as possible, but organics wasn't cutting it for this beast. I don't have a big garden, but I would still normally get many meals from my beans. That year I only got one. The next year I planted shrub beans and covered them with mesh. I wasn't taking any chances.

    • @JBFJBFJBF
      @JBFJBFJBF Рік тому

      Have you been able to continue growing your legumes without pesticides?

  • @aisadal2521
    @aisadal2521 Рік тому +32

    I remember reading about the kudzu plant when I took the SATs. Loved reading about it story, and culinary uses! 🥰

  • @Rainkit
    @Rainkit Рік тому +11

    I live in Missouri and even though the winters get too cold for it to fully take over, you can still find kudzu near major cities. This plant is a nightmare. Its difficult to control and even harder to kill. Kudzu and Japanese honeysuckle both take the crown as the worst invasives in this state due to how hard it is to eliminate them. To the point where i am in awe when i visit a state park that doesn't have either of those plants, because I know how much work that little detail implies.

  • @MastaBroshiX
    @MastaBroshiX Рік тому +25

    Uncle jimbob was a great man until he did it for the vine, he hasn't been seen in years 😭

  • @McStealy
    @McStealy Рік тому +3

    We have these in the Caribbean and they are MADDENING!! Good to know there's a use for them.

  • @Chichi-sl2mq
    @Chichi-sl2mq Рік тому +2

    Tasha the Amazon is my favourite Animalogic presenter. She is so quirky. Honestly you are the coolest teacher on UA-cam.

  • @EmilySmirleGURPS
    @EmilySmirleGURPS Рік тому +11

    I'd love to hear about the genus of Banksia from Australia! I grew up on stories including The Banksia Boys, animated talking seed pods of Banksia bushes (Banksia marginata has a great example) and oooof, nightmare fuel.

  • @shadowscribe
    @shadowscribe Рік тому +5

    It is SO eerie to drive down a kudzu invested landscape. Even in the trees it looks wrong.

    • @gnamedreagan9497
      @gnamedreagan9497 6 місяців тому

      The trees look to be getting smothered to death it makes a great habitat for raccoons opossums and skunks

  • @bobmorgan476
    @bobmorgan476 Рік тому +4

    In North Carolina, we pronounce the plant’s names as “kudd-zoo” as opposed to “could-zoo”, the way Tasha said it. I grew up with the plant as part of the backdrop in my rural town, but I was surprised to find out this defining feature of the southern landscape wasn’t introduced until the twentieth century. I’ve seen the Japanese kudzu bug here as well, although I’ve heard it also attacks soybean crops.

  • @agerven
    @agerven Рік тому +4

    Oh no, Kudzu. Not only it could, but it can and surely will!
    When we bought our first house, a very very very fine house, with two cats in the yard and a shed in the garden, we found the shed to be covered in ivy, or so we thought.
    But no, it was mighty Kudzu, blocking the entrance through the door, shading the windows and whatnot. First we hacked and cut and sawed the door free, so it could be seen and opened. Then we found the Kudzu had completely demolished and torn apart the roof.
    So we spent some nice weekends freeing the shed from all that stuff, which was mostly a very rewarding task. After having the roof repaired, we kept watch for the slightest sign of new Kudzu growing.
    This plant is probably the single good reason to own a machete in the Netherlands.

  • @Sariss1984
    @Sariss1984 Рік тому +3

    Kudzu is very invasive here in sub tropical and tropical Australia. Darn neighbours have it growing all over their yard, I'm forever spraying it to kill it since it grows so fast in hot and humid weather.

  • @brianmoore1164
    @brianmoore1164 Рік тому +12

    That one picture towards the end shows the best way to control it. Let the cows get to it. They are wild for Kudzu and then you can eat the steaks!

  • @GardenUPLandscape
    @GardenUPLandscape Рік тому +6

    I'd love to hear your take on Japanese Knotweed!
    Also thank you so much for including bloopers! You make me feel so much better about my scripted videos 🤣🤣🤣 I so much prefer winging it to scripts!

  • @bdhanes
    @bdhanes Рік тому +1

    ❤😂 Fabulous! Informative and wonderful. OMG the outtakes! 😂

  • @junglelane
    @junglelane Рік тому +4

    Tropical kudzu is one of five vines I constantly fight on my farm. Takes over really fast.

  • @jf_kein_k8590
    @jf_kein_k8590 Рік тому +5

    Kudzu could just be harvested as food for humans and animals.
    Or just lead herds of cows/goats/sheep to such places.

    • @LevineLawrence
      @LevineLawrence Рік тому +1

      It would be a great green manure feed for biogas digesters and vermicompost pits

  • @LukaOnline
    @LukaOnline Рік тому +4

    Hey superstar,
    I'm Luka, the bush regeneration manager at Reforest Now, we are a rainforest restoration charity in Byron Bay, Australia. My current nemesis is Anredera Cordifolia or Madeira vine. I would love to see one of your amazing videos covering this literal demon of a plant. It has alarming similarities to Kudzu. I'm locked in a headed conflict with it as it's invading some of our ancient rainforest remnants.
    Hoping you might dig up some handy hints to help us save some of these old growth giants from being smothered. Love your content and looking forward to what you have next

  • @tare3312
    @tare3312 Рік тому +1

    KUDZUUUU! I don't know if anyone else requested this but I did! So thanks Floralogic! I'm from the southern United States and just wanted to add that folks actually make jelly from this and it's quite good.

  • @TheSayLifeCoach
    @TheSayLifeCoach Рік тому

    6:46 🥹😍 & Mississippian here! We learned about Kudzu in school & it’s origin! Great video! It covered soo many forests in my hometown. I grew up in a semi-rural area & it was beautiful. However, I understand how invasive it is too!

  • @d4ro
    @d4ro Рік тому +1

    great animalogic episode, Tasha is the master of plant plans !!

  • @katherinel8661
    @katherinel8661 Рік тому +8

    Can you do an episode focusing on the way people use kudzu in clothing and cuisine?

  • @HowdIEvenGetHere
    @HowdIEvenGetHere Рік тому

    Tasha the Amazon is so awesome! Love her music, love her docs

  • @zachsmith3376
    @zachsmith3376 Рік тому +2

    During an exceptional ice and snow storm in Alabama my brother and I could walk across it for yards at a time, before falling through.

  • @judetwee
    @judetwee Рік тому +3

    I grew up in Texas and my mom loses her mind any time she sees kudzu where we live now (....which is not the south, as kudzu is spreading west), we have a tiny infestation that refuses to be fully destroyed...

  • @Skclassified
    @Skclassified Рік тому +6

    I’ve never seen a kudzu flower before. I’ll have to keep an eye out for it. Don’t know how I missed it the woods next to the highway have been completely eaten by them.

  • @MehOnCommenting
    @MehOnCommenting Рік тому

    Tasha and her blooper reels are my new fave!

  • @xrgiok
    @xrgiok 7 місяців тому

    I enjoy bloopers even more than actual video!

  • @g4brielb0nfim
    @g4brielb0nfim Рік тому

    Kudzu gives such a eire and sinister vide, I love it. The new hair is awesome btw

  • @sauravsarkar419
    @sauravsarkar419 Рік тому +1

    They say kudzu will cover the whole world and this is how everything ends .... ' it is known .. "

  • @FreshSmog
    @FreshSmog Рік тому +3

    Looking forward to some more beautiful plants! Lupines or wisteria could be interesting 🤔

  • @Guydude777
    @Guydude777 Рік тому +1

    While I shake my head whenever there's kudzu wordplay, it's still really funny.

  • @mariebrown4458
    @mariebrown4458 Рік тому +4

    It's Funny How She Pronounced Kudzu😂😂😊😊Here In The South We Say Khuudzoo😊And Yes It's A Mess Here Snakes Love It And They Use To Say Don't Let Your Cows Get Into It Or You'll Have To Shoot Them To Get E'm Out Of It😂😂😂😂The Flowers Are Pretty And Smell Nice😊😊😊

  • @amandascreativeretreat4574
    @amandascreativeretreat4574 Рік тому

    Love the bloopers, so good.

  • @Randoplants
    @Randoplants Рік тому +5

    Please talk about Japanese Knotweed, which is a less well known invasive

  • @cartoonkenj2209
    @cartoonkenj2209 Рік тому +1

    Would be cool to see an episode on Amborella! It’s really unusual how taxonomically isolated it is!

  • @larissabrantley9263
    @larissabrantley9263 Рік тому

    it may be invasive but it is so beautiful. i remember road tripping through North Carolina and seeing it for the first time along the highway, just covering valleys and trees. its so ethereal, i was like "woah"

  • @watchmecatchpike7145
    @watchmecatchpike7145 Рік тому

    I would like a compilation of outtakes of just Tasha. When she turned into a daemon I almost spit my coffee out.

  • @HeavilyCensoredKitty
    @HeavilyCensoredKitty Рік тому +4

    Just like so many other things in life the Flamethrower might just be the answer.

    • @KenFullman
      @KenFullman 4 місяці тому

      For most other things the chainsaw is your friend.

    • @bullettime1116
      @bullettime1116 3 місяці тому

      Then the kudzu comes back twice as fast with all of the ash

  • @kimbratton9620
    @kimbratton9620 Рік тому +2

    I love Animalogic!

  • @taylor_green_9
    @taylor_green_9 Рік тому +5

    One question: What will happen with the kudzu-eating bugs if they do eradicate all the kudzu?

  • @D_A42
    @D_A42 Рік тому +4

    I worked as a land surveyor in the South. Kudzu has been the bane of my existence for many years. It is awful. It is even worse when the vine dies. Then it becomes even more difficult to cut it up with a machete.

  • @pauljames5826
    @pauljames5826 Рік тому +1

    Kudzu is silently but surely moving NORTH - there are highway division areas in Northern Virginia that have become covered entirely - no kudzu bugs in sight YET!

  • @ZombieslayerLeena
    @ZombieslayerLeena Рік тому

    Miss Tasha, I almost pee’d laughing at your outtakes! You are a TRIP!! ❤😂

  • @williamsurname4669
    @williamsurname4669 Рік тому +1

    I think I've seen this in Maryland too. Quite invasive!

  • @fiberpoet6250
    @fiberpoet6250 Рік тому +1

    I grew up with scenes like this.
    It’s like a cancer
    I do think it could be utilized tho but it’s vines are very fragile once dead so doesn’t have much use for making stuff outta them.
    It’s roots can be used as an anti-alcoholic tea.
    The leaves are edible for goats.
    I’ve seen ppl put a herd of goats on a kudzu patch and they can clear it over time.
    Pigs can dig out the roots
    Maybe it can be used for ethanol 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @injunsun
    @injunsun Рік тому +1

    @Animallogic, Fun Facts: the young leaves are edible as a tender, cooked green, and the beans (rarely formed in the U.S. due to lack of a specialised pollinator) are also supposed to be about as good as edamame. The flowers smell STRONGLY of grape juice.

  • @hypnoticmoai6509
    @hypnoticmoai6509 Рік тому

    That filter you use over the stock pictures, it’s a little trippy

  • @ブルーブルー-f2h
    @ブルーブルー-f2h Рік тому +2

    In Japan, kudzu is deeply rooted in the culture, both as a medicine and a sweet. Kakkonto(葛根湯), perhaps the best known Chinese herbal medicine, is made from kudzu. Kudzukiri(葛切り), Kudzu mochi(葛餅) and Kudzuyu(葛湯)are traditional and popular foods, although these days they may not be made from real kudzu.

    • @rebeccarobinson8174
      @rebeccarobinson8174 Рік тому

      Can doughnuts and other things be made form kudzu?

    • @ytanaka257
      @ytanaka257 Рік тому

      ⁠@@rebeccarobinson8174
      It's an ingredient like gelatin and cornstarch.

  • @Lem0n_23
    @Lem0n_23 Рік тому +2

    I love the out takes

  • @ChrispyNut
    @ChrispyNut Рік тому +1

    Yep, knew there'd be out-takes for that opening before the opening had even finished.
    I suspect Lauren (script writer) knew this too. Meanie.

  • @Charsept
    @Charsept Рік тому +1

    It's not as bad it was 15 years ago but this stuff is still all over the place.
    4:27 That makes so much sense! I was wondering why it thinned out.

  • @thomascoleman594
    @thomascoleman594 Рік тому

    I'm dying laughing cause of the ending. A cat named Cyka is freaking PERFECT

  • @CakeoftheMews
    @CakeoftheMews Рік тому +1

    I once looked up a map of where kudzu is invasive, and then looked up a map of states that seceded from the union and noticed they were a pretty close match.
    Naughty slave states get the invasive fast growing vine.

  • @lokiiago_x0x
    @lokiiago_x0x Рік тому +1

    Purple grape-flavored honey? Yes please!

    • @I.____.....__...__
      @I.____.....__...__ Рік тому

      Indeed. Find a way to stop those bugs and bring in some more vines!!!

  • @blessedbeauty2293
    @blessedbeauty2293 Рік тому

    - 0:39 how many times did you have to cut && re do that line? Lolll I love it 😂❤

  • @katichu
    @katichu Рік тому

    Your kitten is adorable! He reminds me of my siamese cat Autumn when she was a kitten ❤

  • @scottargo2152
    @scottargo2152 Рік тому

    I love the botany lessons but I'm here for the outtakes!

  • @smile--
    @smile-- Рік тому +2

    It is a pretty wine, but boy is it destructive

    • @Pocket_Champs2023
      @Pocket_Champs2023 10 місяців тому

      You mean human laziness for not taming it is destructive.

  • @dmarcouxbeatty374
    @dmarcouxbeatty374 Рік тому +2

    I have learned something new today. Thank you. I like kudzu. (I'm from Southern Arizona. Need I say more?) I've often wondered if kudzu could be used like hemp or flax. Bamboo and coconut hair are now being spun for threads and yarn. Food for bees is always good! Does it have any medicinal uses or essential oil use? If more of the plant could be eaten by humans or a winter silage for livestock? All of God's creations have a purpose or two. We just have to be clever enough to find it.

  • @jp1431
    @jp1431 Рік тому

    Im from Puerto Rico and tht plant is alos everywhere down here. Sometimes it’s sad to see what was a beautiful lush jungle now slowly dying under that thing. Only time I have not seen that plant was when hurricane Maria came through and destroyed all vegetation and it looked like winter had finally come to PR, looked similar to West Virginia in the winter without snow.

  • @marhec69
    @marhec69 3 місяці тому

    I like your videos, they're so cool and educational!

  • @sassa82
    @sassa82 Рік тому +2

    I love floralogic!❤

  • @gonefishing3644
    @gonefishing3644 Рік тому

    Goats love to eat kudzu leaves. If a property is over-run with kudzu, install a sturdy wire mesh fence around the property, provide some drinking water and add a small herd of goats. Within six months or so, the vines will be trimmed as high as the goats can reach when standing on their hind legs with their front legs against a tree trunk. Soon the goats will eat the leafless kudzu vines as high as they can reach which will kill the out-of-reach vines in the treetops. Any new kudzu sprouts will also get eaten.
    My parents used to keep a small herd of less than a dozen goats so that their twenty-acre patch of woodland in Mississippi was kept free of kudzu. The goats did a good job of keeping the woodland free of kudzu and any kids born in the spring were mature enough to be sold in summer to those who wanted a young goat to slaughter and BBQ for a July 4th picnic.

  • @walterlangston4484
    @walterlangston4484 Рік тому

    Was out on a trail trying to film some trains and the kudzu has taking over the abandoned rail yard and mining town

  • @r.awilliams9815
    @r.awilliams9815 Рік тому

    In the Pacific Northwest, it's the Himalayan blackberry that's trying to take over. It's doing a good job of it too.

  • @ohroonoko
    @ohroonoko 14 днів тому

    I don't care how fast this vine grows, it's no match for my backyard chickens.

  • @andrewmedanich2844
    @andrewmedanich2844 Рік тому

    It has hybridized and started growing up North here in Indiana as well

  • @Ssss-xd8hb
    @Ssss-xd8hb Рік тому +1

    Could you talk about the pinus canariensis or canarian pine? I'm from La Palma, where they thrive, and I think they are such amazing plants. I would love to discover more about them.

  • @johncrocker4209
    @johncrocker4209 Рік тому

    I remember SixFlags in Atlanta leaning into the Kudzu takeover. Using it to cover pathways and provide shade.

  • @ikeekieeki
    @ikeekieeki Рік тому

    amazing baby gremlin thank you for sharing

  • @nunyabiznes33
    @nunyabiznes33 Рік тому

    Please do a video about the morning glory family, from the humble sweet potato to the trippy tricolor.

  • @InvisibleSquids
    @InvisibleSquids Рік тому

    Over the course of a week, I saw kudzu scale a high voltage power line tower. One evening, there was a loud bang outside, and when I went to check, it had reached one of the lowest lines, but the part that had made contact exploded from the water in it turning to steam. The next day, most of it had wilted and shriveled up. Then the forestry service came out with that helicopter dangling the long pole with saw blades on it, chopping back the kudzu and tree line

  • @spikegirls
    @spikegirls Рік тому

    Can you talk about Tree of Heaven next? Another invasive plant - a super fast growing tree. When I moved into my house there were none in the yard and now there's like ten of them.

  • @C-Mah
    @C-Mah Рік тому

    Re outtakes, it is interesting how siamese cats get their colorful paws, nose, and ears.

  • @kurtiswebb9907
    @kurtiswebb9907 Рік тому

    I should not have been as hyped as I was to see this video title

  • @erichtomanek4739
    @erichtomanek4739 Рік тому +1

    Let's hope Big Cotton doesn't derail Small Kudzu in the clothing fibre business.
    Sad Hemp noises ........

  • @Στο_πιο_δικαιο
    @Στο_πιο_δικαιο Рік тому +1

    The Japanese knew what they were doing when they gifted the United States this plant.

  • @larryponder6934
    @larryponder6934 Рік тому

    The city of Chattanooga, TN rents goats from local farmers, to keep kudzu under control along certain highways and dams

    • @horaciokanashiro-hv2zn
      @horaciokanashiro-hv2zn Рік тому

      ah!? " ..to keep kudzu under control " ) In my city some guys say the same!

  • @yungo1rst
    @yungo1rst Рік тому

    the traditional treats sounds like a good way to incentivize clearing or harvesting the plant. otherwise maybe a biofuel maybe.

  • @yureituesday
    @yureituesday Рік тому

    The hair, it’s so cute.

  • @rjung_ch
    @rjung_ch Рік тому

    Tasha, you got it down!

  • @dM_gH
    @dM_gH Рік тому

    I'm here for the kitty! More kitty, please! :) 🐾

  • @Gayoinion
    @Gayoinion Рік тому

    I always have memories of seeing it cover sides of highways in nc

  • @palidus
    @palidus Рік тому

    shes lit of the oxygen the kudzu is producing

  • @Skibbityboo0580
    @Skibbityboo0580 Рік тому +3

    My mom used to call it 'virginia creeper'.

    • @SluttChops
      @SluttChops Рік тому

      No. That's what she called your dad.

    • @tygerm00n
      @tygerm00n Рік тому

      Virginia creeper is a completely different plant.

  • @demetriusoconnor8149
    @demetriusoconnor8149 Рік тому

    I would love to see what plants Tasha, the Amazon grows in her home and garden pretty pretty pretty please😅

  • @MammaStrega
    @MammaStrega Рік тому +1

    @animalogic I think you should use the knowledge you have on where Kudzu is located and your social medica following to get people to find the root of the plant and dig it up.
    * Benefit one, it won’t keep growing! If you then peel and boil the root and then cook it until it turns into a starch the starch alone is powerful for Migraine or Cluster Headache suffers. An additional thing that might help certain people is that consuming Kudzu regularly is supposed to be helpful to those with alcohol substance issues so; so essentially yes the plant looks and is annoying but it has many a good things about it for HUGE health benefits that the government doesn’t share…. Why let the plant that would stop so many pharmaceutical pill consumptions for migraines and headaches or take many away from large Alcohol companies and Rehab facilities when a natural gift given by Japan has been sitting there all this time with its secrets hidden. 🙏🏼 Definitely try it if you’re lucky enough to know where a plant is and can figure out where that amazing root is hiding!

    • @MammaStrega
      @MammaStrega Рік тому

      Also what breed is your cat! She was so cute 😂😍