Yes, they can even mess up your foundation. It's recommended that you and me (a first time grower) grow them at a minimum of 30' away from our house. Mines going to be about 50' away from my house in the swampy part of my backyard.
This question doesn't explain what you desire as an answer. Yes, the roots will destroy your pipes as they will drive there way through them. If you have roots in your pipes, no idea. May have to replace all the piping or get someone to remove the roots from the piping for you. Tree roots will not enter pipes unless there is a entry point in the pipe. If pipes are properly sealed there is no problem.
Hey there, You could possibly do that but uve got to take into account that sooner or later u may have a bit of trouble with roots surfacing up from the ground. And also they will need alot of water too. And also check u have no pipes or cables underneath the ground that the roots can damage. U should be able to ring ur local council about that. Hope that helped :o)
A willow is a type of tree. If planting a willow near a home, extreme caution must be taken as these trees require a lot of water and their roots have been known to bust through pipes.
Roughly 50-75 years depending on the size of it. my willow was over 50ft. tall-suddenly turned brown & died. It was 13 yrs. old. that must have been the result of some type of disease or bug ## Black spots are a sign of a very dangerous disease in the Weeping Willow's lifespan. Due to the fact that you grew from a diseased area on the tree or the roots were contaminated some how. I think they have a chemical that will beat the disease in your Weeping Willow. ##
There has been no harmful disease noted about this.
There are a variety of types of trees that absorb a lot of water. One of the most popular trees is the weeping willow.
A weeping bed is located near the septic tank and its pipes for your house. Trees and thirsty shrubs can put roots cause later problems by clogging the drains. You can flush the pipes several times a year with copper sulfate, but the best bet is to choose your plants carefully.
willow tree
There is not a way to tell if a tree is growing . You will have to wait and see when it gets taller.
Copper Sulfate does that job fairly well. We use a bottle each month to keep our weeping willow out of our system. If we miss a month, you see it!
Foxtail palm roots can be damaging to pipes. The roots expand and can harm pipes, and even lift cement at times.
An Arctic Willow is the only tree that lives in the Arctic Tundra and it only grow about 4 inches fronthe ground. lol hope i helped!!!