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Getting Rid of a Rose of Sharon?

Question:

I cut down a Rose of Sharon bush that had become a tree, which was growing up against my house. Now I have "suckers" coming up through the ground in an area about 10 feet all around where it was! Help!

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They are impossible to pull out of the ground (long roots). Is there any way to get rid of them? I am unable to remove the root system from the Rose of Sharon since it is very deep and mainly under my house.

Hardiness Zone: 5b

Thanks!
Kathy from Indianapolis

Answer:

Kathy,

While Rose of Sharon is beautiful to some gardeners, it is the bane of many others. The ROS suckers will eventually disappear, but it's going to require some patience and persistence on your part.

It may take several seasons worth of yanking and digging, but eventually you'll win! Try removing them by digging down as far as you can and cutting them out.

Another alternative is to keep mowing them down as they spring up. Eventually the roots will tire and stop sending up shoots.

If you plan to turn the 10-foot area where the suckers keep popping up into flowerbeds, you might want to try to cut the suckers out, and then cover the area with several sheets of newspaper followed by a thick layer of mulch. This should help prevent new suckers from sprouting. If you want to plant the area, just push aside some mulch and pop the individual plants in.

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Ellen

About The Author: Ellen Brown is an environmental writer and photographer and the owner of Sustainable Media, an environmental media company that specializes in helping businesses and organizations promote eco-friendly products and services.

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By Debra Frick (Guest Post)
June 19, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

AAAAh! I hate to see someone kill a plant that someone else just might be able to use. Dig up some of those suckers and give them to friends before you spray. I just paid 12 dollars for a Rose of Sharon bush I wish I lived near you I would dig them up myself.

 
January 21, 20171 found this helpful

Ugh!! I can't IMAGINE paying for this plant! The flowers just aren't worth it! I wish you lived near ME! I would PAY YOU to come over here and get this horrible beast and all it's little demon suckers off of my property!

 
March 5, 20170 found this helpful

Holy cow! I would read up on this monster demon plant before putting it in the ground! We've been trying to get rid of one for two years. The suckers have now passed UNDER a sidewalk and are trying to take over another bed (after destroying an entire 10ft bed of its own)!!!! We're now building a raised bed with two layers of thick cardboard on the bottom, and then soil on top of those. I will despair if this horrid beast manages to push through again! But if you're planting this demon, perhaps I could interest you in some English ivy as well?

 
May 31, 20170 found this helpful

Where do you live. Come dig up mine lol

 
Anonymous
July 4, 20170 found this helpful

I have both....been fighting ROS since I purchased my home...AND...they have put out English Ivy...so...I'm trying to contain it so it doesn't kill all the other olants...it's constant work...til I figure how to kill ivy as well

 
April 14, 20190 found this helpful

If you live near Ohio, help yourself to my backyard. I fear I will have a Rose of Sharon forest this year!

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 153 Feedbacks
June 20, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

Boiling water will kill off the top. However, it won't kill the root. Frankly, digging them as deep as you can is the safest and cheapest, if you have a strong back.

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 472 Feedbacks
June 23, 20060 found this helpful
Best Answer

I live in a house that was built in 1902, and the original owners planted a Rose of Sharon, which was huge when we moved in. I don't recall the plant ever putting up suckers, except those shoots that come from the base of the trunk. It does however, reseed itself every year after the blooms have past. The seedlings come up the following spring, have deep roots, and are vigorous growers. They are easiest to pull when young and small after a good rain has soaked in.

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When they get larger, you need a shovel to loosen the main tap root. Don't give up. Since the mature tree is down, if you keep getting rid of the young seedlings, soon your yard will be free, unless you leave them in long enough for the young trees to set seeds of their own. I've had some flower and seed during the second year.

 
By Susan from Hamilton (Guest Post)
June 19, 20060 found this helpful

Spray the leaves of these shoots with a herbicide any of the brand names like killex will do. With a spray you can get the ones you want and it will take it down to the root system and kill off the rest of the plant. voila dead sharon lol
sue

 
Anonymous
June 8, 20180 found this helpful

Try cheap vinegar. I used a broken golf club to pre puncture and then spray them with vinegar making it more effective but some of them died without even puncturing.

 
By Barbie (Guest Post)
June 19, 20060 found this helpful

I know you can use vinegar to kill roots.....it's cheap and worth a try....and non toxic.......I use it on deep rooted weeds all the time....don't get it on things you want to live though......plus it dissapates and is dilutable with water so I would think after a time you would have no trouble growing other things there like you would using poisons

 
By Poco (Guest Post)
June 22, 20060 found this helpful

I had the same problem with Purple Sage, dug them out and still have them coming up, I spay the new shoots with Round-Up hopefully that will stop the growth.

 
July 20, 20161 found this helpful

Never use roundup. It's very toxic and is now proven to cause cancer. How it's still on the market it beyond me!!

 

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