News

Learn to recognize Oriental bittersweet when it’s a green vine without bright berries. Its bright green leaves are 2 to 5 inches long, rounded to oval, with fine teeth along the edges and points ...
You have plenty of reasons to get rid of Oriental bittersweet, but removing this fast-growing vine is easier said than done.
A woody vine with many bright orange berries popping out of yellow seed capsules, Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) is a serious invasive plant that threatens native forests. (Deborah J ...
Almost like something out of a horror movie, the slender vines of celastrus orbiculatus,... That clinging vine, Oriental bittersweet, is state's newest resident ...
Anne Morse gets to the root of things. If you're driving around in Winona County and see a woman jump out of her car with a hand saw and bottle of herbicide, don't be alarmed. It's probably Anne ...
China's New Oriental dismissed 60,000 employees and saw operating income plunge by 80% after Beijing enforced new sweeping rules ... New Oriental had employed 105,200 staff including 54,200 ...
Climbing vines have become a hallmark of late summer as MLive Gardens Columnist John Hogan looks into which ones you should keep and those that you should kill off and how.
Marilyn Keller first noticed it three winters ago on her 29 acres near Cedar Rapids. “I would always see grape vines; Virginia creeper. This was a different vine, though,” recalls Keller.
The vine is known as Oriental bittersweet. It originated from Asia and was brought to North America in the 1800s. Simon Wilmot, co-ordinator at the council, said the vine can cause a lot of damage ...
As Minnesotans deck their halls this holiday season, the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) is asking them to watch for Oriental bittersweet – an invasive imposter easily mistaken for … ...