Times Herald-Record

Tumbleweed­s blanket parts of suburban Salt Lake City

- Corey Williams

The gnarled icon of the Old West – ominously featured in movies as gunslinger­s square off on dusty streets and townsfolk shake behind curtained windows – rolled in over the weekend and kept rolling until blanketing some homes and streets in suburban Salt Lake City.

Crews on Tuesday continued to plow, load and haul carcasses of twist- ed and dried tumbleweed­s from neigh- borhoods in South Jordan, Utah, four days after scores of the beachball-sized plants were bounced in by heavy winds.

“People woke up Saturday morning and it looked like these huge walls had been erected made of tumbleweed,” said Dawn Ramsey, South Jordan’s mayor. “We had entire streets in some of our neighborho­ods completely blocked. They wrapped around homes.”

Saturday’s tumbleweed takeover of South Jordan is not isolated, but it’s also not a fiendish plan by the invasive Russian thistle to conquer the western United States. Instead, the occurrence­s are due to combinatio­ns of seasonal wet and dry weather, the death cycle of the plants and strong gusts that propel them.

Native to southeaste­rn Russia and western Siberia, the Russian thistle and other plants like it are believed to have been introduced into the U.S. by Russian immigrants as a contaminan­t in flax seed, according to a tumbleweed abatement program through the Los Angeles County Department of Agricultur­e. They start out as live, green plants that soak up rainwater and grow. As the soil dries, the thistle dies and detaches from the root. The ball then is moved around by the wind and breezes.

“All through the night and through the early morning we had high winds,” said Chris Williams, who lives in South Jordan and used his aerial drone to take video and photos of the tumbleweed Saturday.

“They were gathering everywhere, under cars and trucks and trailers,” he said. “We’ve seen tumbleweed in the area before (but) that was an anomaly.”

Many people used shovels to remove the tumbleweed from in front of their homes, he added.

“I don’t think anybody was in real, real harm,” said Williams, 65. “I still think you could walk through them if you had to. Tumbleweed­s are not real heavy.”

Brett Chumley owns Mom’s Diner in Pahrump, Nevada. For visitors to the area, the sight of tumbleweed swarms are strange to see. Chumley said that for long-time residents of Pahrump, they are “just a normal occurrence.”

“When it rains the weeds grow like crazy,” he said.

Like many weeds, the thistle does really well in areas where the soil has been disturbed, says Erica Fleishman, an Oregon State University professor and director of the Oregon Climate Research Institute.

Places where there is “livestock grazing, agricultur­e, bare soil and not many native plant competitio­n – land they can get a good foothold,” Fleishman said.

Little work has been done on what climate change means for the tumbleweed, she added.

But “climate change could lead to more areas of dry soil or barren soil where tumbleweed could take hold,” Fleishman said. “They’re highly flammable when they’re dried out.”

 ?? BRADY MCCOMBS/AP ?? South Jordan, Utah, a suburb of Salt Lake City, was inundated with tumbleweed­s after a weekend storm brought stiff winds to the area.
BRADY MCCOMBS/AP South Jordan, Utah, a suburb of Salt Lake City, was inundated with tumbleweed­s after a weekend storm brought stiff winds to the area.

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