Bittercress Plant - Garden Work

Cardamine hirsuta, commonly called hairy bittercress, popping cress, [2][3] common bittercress, hoary bittercress, hairy wood-cress, small bittercress, pepperweed, shotweed, or snapweed, [4] is an annual or biennial species of plant in the family Brassicaceae, and is edible [5] as a salad green. Times Colonist: Helen Chesnut's Garden Notes: Weed out bittercress while plants are young Anyone walking through the garden in April will now see it everywhere: small green plants in beds, pots, and cracks in the pavement. What was easy to overlook a few weeks ago has now spread ...

February’s Weed of the Month, narrowleaf bittercress (Cardamine impatiens) is a relative newcomer to Minnesota and has the potential to become highly invasive. Native to Eurasia, it was first reported ... The Cincinnati Enquirer on MSN: 'Good' plants vs. 'bad' plants, and demystifying the word 'invasive' I just read an article that likens hairy bittercress (HB) to the “cranky old man up the street.” If you are familiar with hairy bittercress, you will most likely agree.

bittercress plant, If you are just now learning ... The Baltimore Sun: Garden Q&A: How do I avoid planting invasive species? Q: I saw some wildflowers on a trail last spring that I identified as Star-of-Bethlehem, which I read is not native and sold as a flower bulb for fall planting. I didn’t realize flower bulbs could ...