Happy 250th Birthday Americans and to everyone around the world that shares the original American values of individual rights ...
Editor’s Note: At the height of the growing season, we are sharing information on how to detect and remove two Southwest Michigan invasive species, Kudzu and Japanese Knotweed, both of which are on ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Officials say removing kudzu and other invasive species will improve habitats and restore native ecosystems. Google I/O gave us a ...
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — The City of Knoxville is tackling the infamous kudzu plant in Fort Dickerson Park, with help from a state grant. If all goes well, the city is hoping to take on other plants in city ...
Just southwest of Atlanta's I-85 perimeter sits a manor that seems of another time entirely — because it is. Far more quaint than any of the large-scale multipurpose work-and-play communities or high ...
The National Forests in North Carolina, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, note that, "Kudzu spreads at a rate of 2,500 acres per year and plagues many southern states. Since it grows so fast ...
Kudzu, originally native to Japan, is known as "the vine that ate the South." The federal government began paying farmers $8 an acre in the 1930s to plant it across the south because it was touted to ...
These invasive insects likely hitch-hiked from Asia into the U.S. on an airplane in 2009. They were first reported in nine Georgia counties, increasing to 60 counties plus one North Carolina county ...
Kudzu, the vine that swallowed the South, with a growth rate of 1 foot per day, is native to East Asia and was first brought to the United States in 1876 for the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition. In ...
Who doesn't love a good "before and after" transformation? A TikTok video showing a homeowner's completely transformed backyard — which was once overrun by invasive kudzu — has caught the attention of ...
This week, I'll be untangling vines. The climbing plants have become an almost otherworldly Southern feature. They are seen draped along roadsides in sunny areas, sprawling across wood lines and ...