We have this on Galveston Island, near Texas. I lived very near the beach for years, and this plant loved the sandy soil and grew HUGE tu...Read Morebers. I call it "stinkvine" for the reason others have mentioned. I'm in a different part of town now, with better soil, and I find bits of this vine coming up from time to time, which I pull up right away. It's not a really troublesome vine but it's also not particularly useful in the garden and takes up somebody else's space. I read somewhere once that it is a butterfly larval host down in South Texas but can't remember what it was.
This weedy, smelly, invasive vine has chained, tubers, impossible to get rid of after three years of gardening here in Weatherford, Texas...Read More by pulling them up and digging. Our local area folks call this cow itch vine. I hate it and am slowly digging up the tubers and throwing them in the garbage after letting them bake in the Texas sun.
Someone mentioned a moth that was feeding on it. How could I get that Moth to North Texas?
See this vine around the ranch in Starr County (deep south tip of Texas) climbing up mesquite trees and on some of the fence lines but wh...Read Moreen I spotted a Wilson's Wood-nymph Moth (Xerociris wilsonii) caterpillar eating it I just had to bring the caterpillar in to raise and of course, I had to take cuttings of this vine. WHOA!!! This vine stinks!!! Wooo doggie! What a horrible stench!!! UGH!!!
Oh well, am giving it a neutral rating as it at least it serves the useful purpose of being a larval host plant for an unusual looking moth.
We have this on Galveston Island, near Texas. I lived very near the beach for years, and this plant loved the sandy soil and grew HUGE tu...Read More
This weedy, smelly, invasive vine has chained, tubers, impossible to get rid of after three years of gardening here in Weatherford, Texas...Read More
See this vine around the ranch in Starr County (deep south tip of Texas) climbing up mesquite trees and on some of the fence lines but wh...Read More