tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30790016.post7983811509275812519..comments2024-03-29T03:40:45.267-04:00Comments on Princeton Nature Notes: Rogers Refuge and the Importance of StewardshipSteve Hiltnerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13814809440369173963noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-30790016.post-31004263397229203722018-10-01T18:00:51.511-04:002018-10-01T18:00:51.511-04:00On Mile-A-Minute vine: I discovered and removed a ...On Mile-A-Minute vine: I discovered and removed a patch on the D&R canal path, about old-milepost 23 facing south, new mile marker ~16.5 (if I recall correctly), that's about a mile north of Rte. 518. Easy to handle with leather gloves, but nasty else. Left real-estate-type-sign wire frames on either side of the path to mark the spot, for a follow-up visit next summer. It's hard to know if they had shed seed yet, or if I got all the roots. Another place it occurs: along the northern half of Brick Yard Road in Washington Crossing Park, between the gate and Phillips Farm Pond. Probably too much there to ever eradicate. I will keep an eye out for it around P'ton.Stanton de Rielhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14854892968543878333noreply@blogger.com