Invasive Thunbergia...

It spreads through both its seeds and vigorous vegetative habit, and can also spread through the dumping of garden waste. It makes a dramatic focal point when grown on a decorative support in a border or bed, or trellis along a wall for to create a quick privacy screen.

Black eyed Suzanne
Black eyed Suzanne

I could use some inspiration. Cause I feel I completely lost all off it in regards to just about everything and anything. Mostly I lost inspiration about the garden. It feels so messy out there now when the leaves started to fall, and [thanks to the warm weather] the weed is coming back, big time!

So I fell I don't know where to start. Also making me loose inspiration in the garden is the fact I lost one shrubby tree and one tree of the more normal kind. I don't know why they just decided to die.

But it makes me a bit sad. It will also come with expenses to plant something new in their place. Not only that, one [me] also need to figure out what to plant.

Also thriving in the garden are two plants of Black Eyed Suzanne [Thunbergia alata] and I'm not sure planting them was such a good idea in the first place.

In general these plants are more and more starting to feel very invasive like British Ivy if you'd like so I really, really hope they die out before and or during winter and won't come back for next season. Especially after googling up on them.

Which makes me wonder why garden centres keep selling potentially invasive and damaging plants. Thunbergia Alata shou

If I put some strings on the fence in the back garden plants like these could maybe roam free cause anything that covers up that ugly corner will do. But then again, doing so they will eventually cause a problem. So let's not do that.

Instead I sense I will start up some serious damage control when I get back home from work today and remove these plants from our garden once and for all.