Gardeners have been issued a stark warning about a common plant that recently wreaked havoc on someone’s home, causing £100k of damage.
The homeowner was left to foot the eye-watering bill after their neighbour’s bamboo plant spread from their own garden and up into their property, according to invasive plant specialists Environet UK.
The running variety of bamboo had quietly built a huge network of rhizomes – underground plant stems – beneath the fence and towards the £700k four-bedroom home in Hampshire.
Unfortunately for the occupiers, the issue only became apparent when the plant started bursting through the walls, with shoots coming out in the living room, study, hall and kitchen through gaps between the wall and the floor.
Environet UK
In order to remove the hundreds of metres of bamboo, the floor had to be broken and lifted out, as did the walls and internal walls in the kitchen and bathroom.
It was also found that the plant had begun to grow up into the cavity walls, meaning it could eventually have forced them apart if it had been left any longer.
Once the homeowners’ insurers agreed to pay, it took workers a whole week to remove the rhizomes. According to Environet, they had to move out for the works to be carried out, and are yet to move back in.
Nic Seal from Environet UK said on the incident: “This is the worst case of bamboo encroachment and damage to property I’ve ever seen in this country.
Environet UK
“It’s unfortunate that bamboo is still sold at garden centres and plant nurseries with little or no warning about the risks.
“I would urge anyone considering planting bamboo to think twice and, if you already have it growing in your garden, take action now to ensure it’s properly contained. It can be worse than Japanese knotweed.”
If you’re concerned about your home becoming consumed by garden bamboo – which was likely very small and cute when you planted it – the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) has offered a number of tips to keep the plant under control.
Because the majority of weed-suppressant ground cover fabrics will not stop invasive bamboo from spreading, the RHS says that digging out clumps of bamboo can help with restricting the size, as would planting it inside a physical barrier.
For their full range of tips, visit the RHS website.
A ‘fit as a fiddle’ charity runner, 85, from Greater Manchester has been chosen to be one of the faces of a new Adidas advert.
Barbara Thackray, a grandmother from Altrincham, runs 10k twice a week to keep fit. She has been chosen — alongside the likes of Liverpool footballer, Mo Salah, Qatari hurdler Mariam Farid and Egyptian runner Khadija Hegazy in the new TV and YouTube advert — as one of the faces of to feature in it.
The retired college lecturer took up running eight years ago, aged 77, to raise funds for St Ann’s Hospice in Heald Green, Stockport.
She has been raising money for the hospice since her sister died there in the 1990s.
She said she watched the new advert ‘on a little screen’ and it was ‘fine’, adding: “So long as they were prepared to make a significant donation to St Ann’s Hospice, I felt ok about it.”
Ms Thackray has raised over £20,000 for St Ann’s Hospice in just a few short years, having been a champion of the organisation for over 10 years — including during her sister’s illness and eventual passing.
She’s not planning on stopping running any time soon.
Paddy McGuinness has fans’ hopes up as he hints at a return of the comedy show Max and Paddy’s Road to Nowhere.
The show was a spin-off of Peter Kay’s iconic Phoenix Nights, which Kay and McGuinness starred in as the club’s bouncers. The Channel 4 spin-off aired in 2004 and proved popular, though there were only ever six episodes made.
It picked up where Phoenix Nights left off; with Max and Paddy driving off into the sunset as they feared for their lives after the club patron threatened them with a hitman. The pair began a life on the road as they got into a number of hilarious scrapes along the way.
McGuinness teased fans as he hinted: “Well, when we talk about stuff, like the interesting thing about Max and Paddy and Phoenix Nights is now, we are kind of all of an age of the people we played back then.
Channel 4
“But we [him and Kay] do talk about it and what have you, but, I don’t, I can’t, I can’t see it at the minute, but we never say never, but it’s good to talk. Max and Paddy for instance, we wrote a couple of Christmas specials, and we’ve still got them.
“We never got around to doing one for whatever the reasons were back in the day. But we’ve actually got them!”
While it’s not definite, the door remains open for the two mischievous doormen should they wish to make a comeback.
It’s unclear whether Kay would return to the show as he is currently in the middle of a UK arena tour while McGuinness is back performing stand-up for the first time in 12 years.
Channel 4
As the Take Me Out star continued: “I mean, he’s on tour. I’ve got all kinds of stuff going on, and it’s just sort of going ‘right, let’s get together. Let’s get our diaries together. And let’s blank out for that time’.”
Kay started his tour in December but McGuinness has said he doesn’t need to watch his mate perform live on stage, adding: “The mad thing about this show is, he rings me up, he says, ‘I’m going on tour’.
“So my first thing is, ‘why? Why do that? Why put yourself…’ and he’s like, ‘I want to do it’, this, that and the other. Great, fair enough, each to their own, and it is very seducing when you’re on stage and people are laughing.
@mcguinness.paddy / Instagram
“So anyhow, he’s put this massive tour on, I come round for a cup of tea. So I’m round at his house, kids are out, wife’s out, it’s just me and him and a cup of tea. So he says, ‘get the laptop, I’ll talk you through stuff’.”
He continued: “And then he says, ‘I tell you what, I’ll do the show now’. So he’s in his slippers, jogging pants from George at Asda, T-shirt with bean juice down the front – it’s just him.
“I’m sat where you are to me, he’s done the full routine.”
A man who was fed up with the UK pothole problem has decided to start filling them with Pot Noodles.
Mark Morell, from Brackley, wanted to tackle the UK pothole issue so he decided to fill the dreaded ditches in the road with Pot Noodles. Also known as ‘Mr Pothole’, Morell wanted to highlight the ridiculousness of the problem in the hope that councils would notice and do something about it.
Now he’s teamed up with the Pot Noodle brand to urge the government to fix the state of the UK’s roads. In a tweet on his Twitter page, he put: “Since #NothingFillsAHoleLikePotNoodle, who better to team up with to highlight the ridiculous state of the UK’s roads than @potnoodle.
“Send us pictures of your worst, local potholes using the hashtag and tagging your local council!”
As reported in The Metro, it’s not the first time he has tried to come up with unusual ideas to catch the attention of the council to sort the issue. His previous ideas of floating rubber ducks and feeding potholes cake on their birthday were unsuccessful, forcing him to think up new measures.
He told The Metro: “Potholes drive road users potty and me more than most. The pothole crisis across the UK is an increasingly serious issue and something I have been campaigning on for more than 10 years.
“During this period I have had to use my noodle with stunts to highlight just how bad potholes are, from floating plastic ducks in water filled potholes, birthday cakes, fishing rods and model submarines.”
Experts say that ‘rapid freeze and thawing cycles’ have made situation affecting the UK’s roads much worse. And Morell is not the only one who has been coming up with wacky methods to get potholes fixed in their local area.
In Manchester ‘Wanksy’ became famous for spray painting penises around them — which proved to be pretty effective — with council workers taking swift action to remove the profanity from the street.