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Peter Ellis wrote:So many answers.
You might want to look at what Martin Crawford does with bamboo in his food forest. There it is integrated into the system of polycultures and part of his method of controlling its tendency to expand is harvesting the young shoots for eating.
Bamboo can be a good choice for wind breaks, with its dense growth pattern and high rate of growth. It can be a source of construction material, animal fodder, heating fuel. The young shoots of many varieties are at least edible to people.
If you have someplace where you want erosion control but are not wanting to do earthworks it can provide a sort of living gabion and help capture nutrients that might otherwise wash away.
There is a long and very informative thread about bamboo on here someplace. One of the contributors is a professional landscaper in the Carolinas with a focus on bamboo. He had loads of great information to share.
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Rick Bort wrote:
Have you checked out Geoff Lawton's bamboo video. (All his videos are totally worth the mildly-annoying registration.)
http://www.geofflawton.com/fe/61148-power-of-bamboo
It could give you some good insights about how bamboo can influence the movement of water, nutrients, and wind through your property.
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Brian Cady wrote:My old boss, Stephen Breyer, has a very informative online catalog with many species of bamboo, and with detailed hardiness info.:
http://www.tripplebrookfarm.com/newweb/general/bamboo_main.shtml
Some types of bamboo, like bunch grasses, do not run long rhizomes everywhere, but instead form clumps. A few of these are quite cold-hardy.
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.... It is a clumping variety ...
Brian Cady wrote:
.... It is a clumping variety ...
That's funny. My boss has Phylostachys nuda listed as a large running bamboo, not as a clumper.
http://www.tripplebrookfarm.com/newweb/gen/genusindex/Phyllostachys_all.shtml
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