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How to Kill Poison Ivy in One Day- Without Poisonous Chemicals

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2016
  • Poison Ivy can be a real problem in your garden, in you lawn or in the woods where the plants or your animals could get it's oils on you.
    Here is a cheap and simple way to get rid of poison ivy without using dangerous chemicals or herbicides that could harm you or your animals.
    And it works in just one day.
    If you want to learn more about growing more food than you can eat, without chemicals, here are links to Rick’s books:
    Secret Garden Of Survival : How to Grow a Camouflaged Food Forest
    : www.amazon.com/gp/product/148...
    Secret Greenhouse of Survival : How to Build the Ultimate Homestead & Prepper Greenhouse
    www.amazon.com/gp/product/149...
    Secret Livestock of Survival : How to Raise the 10 Best Choices for Retreat and Homestead Livestock
    www.amazon.com/gp/product/151...

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @PileofBrass
    @PileofBrass Před 2 lety +132

    Use a blue dye to highlight your coverage. It's just a blue spray marker. Works very well so you can see what you sprayed and missed.

    • @yukonjack.
      @yukonjack. Před 2 lety +5

      EXCELLENT IDEA!!✌️

    • @Hinoki352
      @Hinoki352 Před rokem +6

      Thank you!! I was literally JUST thinking about this issue!

    • @kuvasz5252
      @kuvasz5252 Před rokem +3

      some hair dyes are sulfonated azo dyes, that can act as pH indicators and change from blue to red as the pH lowers, and since vinegar is 5% acetic acid don't be freaked out if the blue dye in neutral pH water turns to reddish purple as you add the vinegar to the water.

  • @moboutmen
    @moboutmen Před 3 lety +94

    Damn it! I touched the screen while the ivy was on it! I'm screwed.

    • @wordswritteninred7171
      @wordswritteninred7171 Před 3 lety +3

      I was screwed the minute I saw the thumbnail!

    • @heartpaws519
      @heartpaws519 Před 2 lety +2

      😂🤣🤣

    • @amy3458
      @amy3458 Před 2 lety +2

      That’s what you get for having a hi-res citified screen!

    • @xB-fx2iu
      @xB-fx2iu Před 3 měsíci +2

      cut off your hand! Quick! It's too late for me two minutes into the video

    • @solonepeon5805
      @solonepeon5805 Před 2 měsíci +1

      😂😂😂😂(ToT)

  • @kurtkrueger5622
    @kurtkrueger5622 Před 8 lety +449

    Add a dash on Dawn dish soap to that, keeps the mixture stuck to the plant. So when the water hits the pland it won't run off the oily plant.

    • @TruckTaxiMoveIt
      @TruckTaxiMoveIt Před 5 lety +4

      Oh

    • @privacymatters5204
      @privacymatters5204 Před 5 lety +4

      Duke Of Prunes baby shampoo is full of chemicals

    • @oldgringo66
      @oldgringo66 Před 5 lety +8

      S F you can find generic baby shampoo without perfume or chemicals. Don’t buy name brands.

    • @wdtaut5650
      @wdtaut5650 Před 5 lety +218

      @@DROID.MICHAELS Whoa! People with severe poison ivy sensitivity can get it internally by inhaling the smoke, even when the smoke is dissipated too thin to see. Please don't burn poison ivy.

    • @iona9582
      @iona9582 Před 5 lety +84

      @@DROID.MICHAELS If you burn poison ivy, the oils become airborne and go in your lungs, causing systemic poison ivy. This is terrible and requires hospitalization.

  • @jasonknowles3465
    @jasonknowles3465 Před 3 lety +123

    You need a surfactant as well so that this will stick to the plant; dish soap works well as a good organic option. This doesn’t actually kill the roots of the plant rather it burns the foliage. The root system will eventually grow back.

    • @michaelwillcutt2619
      @michaelwillcutt2619 Před 2 lety +6

      Best surfactant is vegetable oil

    • @lindanitzschke1315
      @lindanitzschke1315 Před 2 lety +7

      Depending on the size of the plant (how much area it covers) and how close to a stove you are (and how far you are able to carry buckets of water, I would suggest you use a bunch of boiling water...that SHOULD do the roots, too, depending on how good a job you do. I'll bet soft water would be the best to use...I know soft water will kill grass, even without it being boiling hot.

    • @nicolashuffman4312
      @nicolashuffman4312 Před 2 lety +21

      @@michaelwillcutt2619 vegetable oil is not a surfactant. sorry, not trying ot start fights.

    • @oldtimefarmboy617
      @oldtimefarmboy617 Před 2 lety +10

      @@michaelwillcutt2619
      A surfactant's purpose is to eliminate water's surface tension so it spreads out instead of beading up. Surfactants also enable oils to mix with water. Vegetable oil does not mix with water.
      Vegetable oil will create an oily coating on a plant's leaves and suffocate the leaves but it will also repel water and any herbicide you may be using.

    • @simplyput5615
      @simplyput5615 Před 2 lety

      The beaded up water in my sink, runs down the drain when I spray it with Lysol. Maybe add some of that to the mixture...??

  • @edwardhaughney9665
    @edwardhaughney9665 Před 6 lety +30

    My approach is to locate the plants and digging the roots. The poison ivy vine can be 2 in. in thickness when growing up a tree. I begin following the beast below ground. It can go 20 ft. or more but not very deep. This type of killing I enjoy. Arms, hands legs need to be covered.

  • @barbfrancis
    @barbfrancis Před 5 lety +29

    Even when the plant looks dead, dead leaves, vine and rootes are still poisonous and should be handled as if it were still alive. Also, the vinegar/dishsoap/salt solution does not kill the roots, only the leaves. It will grow back in a week or so.

    • @ToddKing
      @ToddKing Před rokem

      "Even when the plant looks dead, dead leaves, vine and rootes are still poisonous and should be handled as if it were still alive." There is no poison in Poison Ivy, the rash is caused by an allergic reaction to oils in and on the plant.

    • @elijah4606
      @elijah4606 Před rokem +10

      Even if it grows back, if you keep at it eventually it will die. You have to exhaust the energy stored in the roots by forcing it to grow new leaves.

  • @RosemaryN
    @RosemaryN Před 2 lety +61

    I was traumatized by my first and only poison ivy rash a few years ago- the pain and discomfort were right up there with child birth, a gallbladder attack and quitting smoking. I recently learned that friction is critical for getting the oils off your skin- Rubbing the area with a wash cloth, if only with water, will remove the oil where just your hands with soap and water will not.

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj Před 2 lety +2

      What most people don’t understand is that the oil is not an allergen, it is a chemical irritant, and yes, ya have to scrub it off. Some people will put dish lotion on before heading to the woods, but first it would feel gross, and second it can reduce how efficiently your body cools itself.

    • @michaelwillcutt2619
      @michaelwillcutt2619 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lilolmecj soap like dishwashing only makes the poison absorb into your skin faster . Like chemicals soaps and oil’s are surfactants holding the poison to your skin longer

    • @lilolmecj
      @lilolmecj Před 2 lety +3

      @@michaelwillcutt2619 makes sense, I could never try it, I am very sensitive to things on my skin. I am lucky in that I am not very sensitive to these plants, and I live in the Pacific Northwest, and it is not super common here. Blackberries, that’s another thing! I grew up in the south, and my sister was/is super sensitive, all four of us kids would do a woods walk and she would be affected when the rest of us were not.

    • @mikeattard3543
      @mikeattard3543 Před 2 lety +10

      @@michaelwillcutt2619 I was told the opposite, that you need something like Dawn to break up the oils and remove it from your skin. The source I read agreed that scrubbing with a cloth (which is the discarded) was critical, too.

    • @timefortinybirdandfriends6565
      @timefortinybirdandfriends6565 Před 2 lety +5

      I had to go to the urgent care for a shot! Ouch! I keep Tecnu poison ivy scrub on hand and it works wonders for all itchy stuff!

  • @ScreenPrintR
    @ScreenPrintR Před 7 lety +1

    Thank you I might need it. Just saw a huge vine behind our house. Not sure what it is. Didn't see three leaves at first glance. I'll have to look again to make sure.

  • @dedguru
    @dedguru Před 3 lety +26

    My cats go out and get the oils on their fur and bring it back to me. I’ve had it badly. You could even see the paw prints of it on my chest. Great information. Thank you.

    • @realmarsattacksagain
      @realmarsattacksagain Před rokem

      You are probably Vitamin C deficient. Many blood type Os have this problem. I took vitamin C for 3 months and became immune to P.I.. After a year at 3000 mgs a day I was able to wean down to 1000 a day. I'm now on a lifelong maintenance dose of 500 a day. I can even rub Poison ivy on my face and it doesn't bother me.
      One's allergy level to P.I. Is directly related to diet. Now that i've stopped eating junk food and soda and only healthy meat and vegetables, my allergies have been almost eliminated.
      If one is a smoker, God forbid, you'll have to start with 6000 a day. It's better to quit smoking and stop eating sugar and just not have these immune. problems.

    • @garysimon7765
      @garysimon7765 Před 23 dny

      Don't let your cats run loose. That's even more criminal during baby season.

  • @monasobkowich4608
    @monasobkowich4608 Před rokem +5

    Bentonite clay made into a thick paste spread on infected area seems to be the best way to treat it. Wrap it up and reapply after bathing. Oatmeal bath to stop extreme itching. I have heard pigs also kill the poison ivy plant but I have no first hand experience. A farmer friend shared this with me. Good luck everyone. Poison ivy is no joke.

  • @consolacionlammawin789
    @consolacionlammawin789 Před 3 lety +2

    I got infected of poison ivy on my back yard and this is very helpful . Thanks

  • @marg233
    @marg233 Před 2 lety +1

    This is awesome you've helped me a great deal a city slicker who knows nothing abt PI yet I'm learning thanx 2U so I'll get it done b4 grandkids arrive 👍🏻 Have a great day 😘

  • @persiasamovar3782
    @persiasamovar3782 Před 6 lety +13

    It makes sense to me to save your self made natural vinegar for consumption, health, body hygiene but use industrial vinegar for uses like killing poison ivy or similar chores.

  • @lostboy583
    @lostboy583 Před 5 lety +20

    Helps to do it in full sun and use the mist spray option. The key is to soak the leaves. It usually has little effect to roots. It’s simply drying out exposed foliage. Sun is key

  • @danhaley4465
    @danhaley4465 Před 2 lety

    Thank you! 3rd time with it this spring.. pulled the roots while expanding the food forest.. bad idea

  • @west-virginia-coon-hunting3829

    Thanks for the information, enjoyed your video, keep looking up!

  • @bevkay4170
    @bevkay4170 Před 5 lety +7

    Also, stubborn plants like any ivy, you have to spray it at the roots not just on top. ALL Vinegar, soap, yard sprayer and bye bye weeds. Do not dilute with water. No water needed unless you want to add salt for a permanent kill. If you want to plant something you’ll need to put several inches of dirt about 7 - 10in before planting.

  • @kathybringman2573
    @kathybringman2573 Před 2 lety +18

    As farmers with a hundred acres of forest land we would run into poison ivy. We would take a clean rag with a small amount of gas on it to wipe away the oils from the poison ivy. It stops the itch instantly. When your a mile or more on foot in the forest you are glad for the relief.

    • @BuffaloBilliam
      @BuffaloBilliam Před 2 lety +2

      So you're a farmer, your land is filled with forest, and you have poison ivy plants that cause instant itching?

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 2 lety

      @@BuffaloBilliam Yeah, that made no sense. Maybe she has poison ivy mixed up with stinging nettle. That grows in damp forest understory habitats.

    • @kathybringman2573
      @kathybringman2573 Před rokem

      @@donnievance1942 your right it was nettles not poison ivy.

    • @kathybringman2573
      @kathybringman2573 Před rokem

      @@BuffaloBilliam my husband corrected me. It was nettles not poison ivy.

  • @johnfitbyfaithnet
    @johnfitbyfaithnet Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for sharing this important information listening from Brownwood Texas

  • @markhogue4778
    @markhogue4778 Před 5 lety +2

    Been using vinegar for years at a 30% vinegar to 70% water. I also add 5 drops of dish washing liquid. This allows the finger to stick to what it is sprayed on.

  • @ricladouceur6202
    @ricladouceur6202 Před 3 lety +27

    At least this guy actually knows what poison ivy is. The last guy who gave advice I saw didn't know the difference between ivy and oak.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 2 lety +1

      The difference is pretty academic. They're both in same genus and have the same toxin. Also the colloquial common common name varies from area to area and is pretty much just a matter of local culture.

  • @carlsa
    @carlsa Před 8 lety +12

    You may get more effective coverage by adding a surfactant to your vinegar/water mix. In agriculture, it's called an adjuvant and is used to make the spray "stick" better to the target plant.

  • @mainemountainman3743
    @mainemountainman3743 Před 6 lety

    Thanks, I'll give it a try, have a mess of the stuff around my highbush blueberries....

  • @saemushailstorm3135
    @saemushailstorm3135 Před 6 lety +2

    trick is to add dishsoap as well , spray in morning when foliage is still soft - would urge higher % vinegar 1/2 & 1/2

  • @adventuresunknown1013
    @adventuresunknown1013 Před 5 lety +6

    WOW, thank you for your channel and this video! 😄

  • @kilovolt706
    @kilovolt706 Před 5 lety +5

    Cut shoots at 45° near ground, then spray the cut with the vinegar/dish soap epsom salt mix. This will kill the roots. Bag and throw out vines carefully. Cover with bark chips/mulch and plant a cover crop like comfrey to rehab soil and drown out any stragglers that try to come back up.

  • @sandyschipper155
    @sandyschipper155 Před 4 lety

    Thanks bunches, can't wait to try.

  • @KathyNichols-zd9sc
    @KathyNichols-zd9sc Před 6 lety +3

    I was wondering what to do about mine I'm on my way outside now I have everything I need thank you very much

  • @TheSpiker4sure
    @TheSpiker4sure Před 7 lety +160

    Caution, the plant may be dead but the oil is still active and on the leaves and stems.

    • @wandastevens3183
      @wandastevens3183 Před 4 lety +7

      Yep...I caught it for the first time in my life in February ,clearing out a back yard of overgrowth...

    • @wandastevens3183
      @wandastevens3183 Před 4 lety +2

      This is how I started getting poison ivy in Cold February....

    • @freezo244
      @freezo244 Před 3 lety +2

      @@wandastevens3183 definitely.

    • @graceosteen4763
      @graceosteen4763 Před 3 lety +5

      I have poison Ivy all over my body it’s ugly and painful itchy

    • @JKiler1
      @JKiler1 Před 3 lety +6

      @preston crofford Benadryl will help. If you come into contact with it, you have a few hours to get it off, but you have to be vigorous, with grease cutting soap and scrape with your fingernails.

  • @jimh2061
    @jimh2061 Před 3 lety +13

    If you ever come in contact with this you have to use a washcloth and soapy water to get the oils off. Its much better than washing with just soapy hands.

    • @Mathuews1
      @Mathuews1 Před 3 lety +3

      This is correct. You've got to grind off a few layers haha

    • @timfarry7071
      @timfarry7071 Před 2 lety +2

      Actually it might be dangerous using soapy water, it tends to spread the oil around and contaminate an even larger area. There are products on the market to remove the oils, they work wonders. If you use soap, wait until a generous hosing with plain water is done first, then be VERY thorough. Such tiny amounts will still burn the skin, had several run-ins with poison ivy, best to keep the special wash handy when around it...

  • @Tinkerbell31326
    @Tinkerbell31326 Před 6 lety

    Thank you for the tip. I needed to know this info

  • @chillindave1357
    @chillindave1357 Před 2 lety +1

    great vid, ty! If/when you do get it, Dawn dish soap & a scrub pad... heavy scrubbing WILL remove it from skin.. pretend it's heavy, black truck grease you're trying to remove!

  • @horridstorm73
    @horridstorm73 Před 7 lety +103

    I'm glad it worked for you. I'm not call bs but here's the deal. I've tried your mix and I've tried vinegar and salt and vinegar salt dawn. I got no effect at all. Maybe a little discoloration of leaves after a few days of repeated treatment. what I found works is digging the vine out completely including roots. I'm not allergic to the stuff but the rest of the family is so I was the lucky one to do the digging lol. No more poison ivy patch. now for the next dozen patches. I refuse to use chemicals on my farm.

    • @SurvivalistGardener
      @SurvivalistGardener  Před 7 lety +27

      Try is with straight vinegar (no water this time) and some dawn...I am finding that I am having to use a heavier concentration of vinegar to turn them brown this year.

    • @randyc5650
      @randyc5650 Před 7 lety +7

      I pull mine out too. With gloves on. The dead leaves will get you just as bad as the green ones.It doesn't get to me unless I have scratches on my arms. Then it's bad news. Pull out all the runners, throw them on the burn pile and stay out of the smoke.

    • @armoredspartan9526
      @armoredspartan9526 Před 7 lety +46

      Randy C NEVER BURN IT even if ur not in the smoke it CAN still give you a rash

    • @gailpugsley3211
      @gailpugsley3211 Před 7 lety +5

      horridstorm, how are you disposing of your poison ivy after you dig it out?

    • @asmrgamer3266
      @asmrgamer3266 Před 6 lety +32

      Randy C That's incredibly dangerous to burn poison ivy

  • @lisawest4098
    @lisawest4098 Před 3 lety +40

    I use goats to clean up the poison ivy around our barn It took them about 2 weeks it's been 3 years now no more poison ivy

    • @5jerry1
      @5jerry1 Před 3 lety +6

      ~ That's shocking, that they can eat it without any problems (I'm assuming they eat it?).

    • @lisawest4098
      @lisawest4098 Před 3 lety +6

      @@5jerry1 Yes they ate the poison ivy the nettles and even rhubarb leaves without any problems

    • @charlemagnetheFranks
      @charlemagnetheFranks Před 3 lety

      Can goats eat poisonous hemlock?

    • @lisawest4098
      @lisawest4098 Před 3 lety

      @@charlemagnetheFranks I am sure they will try it at least once

    • @Eusantdac
      @Eusantdac Před 3 lety +4

      I love goats. They're so amazing!

  • @donatemple1104
    @donatemple1104 Před 5 lety

    Thanks I will try the pure Vinegar.

  • @claudiofagundes9502
    @claudiofagundes9502 Před 5 lety +8

    I have used that exact same vinegar in the past straight up without mixing any water and it worked really well but about four months later the plant came back and had to be sprayed again next time I'll just add some dish soap so it sticks better

    • @ESLinsider
      @ESLinsider Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah I tried that and it didn't work. It seems like if you don't get the roots out it will come back. I tried boiling water, vinegar, dish soap, and even some left over cleaning water that had a little bleach in it. Vinegar and dish soap didn't do much. Boiling water worked somewhat.
      I even made flame thrower with veggie oil spray and a lighter that was fun and I killed a lot of it. They'll say don't do that though. Wore glasses and a mask when I did it and didn't have any prob.
      Yet a few months later I still saw some growing back where I roasted it.
      I think maybe the best way to get rid of it is dig it up and pull the roots out just got to be cautious about it.

  • @olddale8443
    @olddale8443 Před 7 lety +73

    Don,t know where the person making this video lives, but here in South West Virginia we have a plant called jewel weed that will
    eliminate a bad case of poison ivy or poison oak overnight. the plant has light green serragated leaves with a translucent stem before it matures. Prior to maturing it has bright orange flowers, when touched cause seeds to pop out. It is also referred to as touch me knots. It grows in 90% shade areas. To use, simply cut the stem as low as possible, crush in a flat dish and rub the liquid on the effected area. The crushed stem can also be used

    • @OakKnobFarm
      @OakKnobFarm Před 6 lety +10

      We have jewel weed here in NH, too. Works great for itches! You can get a tremendous amount of fluid out of them, too. The stems are very juicy. A note about the seeds: They look like tiny green bananas. And they basically "explode" when you touch them

    • @angrodNumenesse
      @angrodNumenesse Před 6 lety +15

      We have Jewel Weed here in PA too. Works great on poison ivy and also mosquito bites! Works to prevent bites too. It's slightly toxic to humans, fatal to bugs, and whatever is in the juice destroys the protein in urushiol. I've been thinking about harvesting some to make my own bug spray.

    • @OakKnobFarm
      @OakKnobFarm Před 6 lety +21

      The best thing about jewel weed: It likes the same "turf" as poison ivy - border zones between grass and forest. They VERY often grow side-by-side. Mother Nature is groovy like that.

    • @stew9stew
      @stew9stew Před 6 lety +4

      all these reply comments have such new, great info for someone living in the Pacific Coast area -- thanks!

    • @markmcarthy596
      @markmcarthy596 Před 6 lety +10

      Olddale I am so glad to see others aware of jewel weed-nature provides remedies & jewel weed does grow well in poison ivy patches. To kill poison ivy-shove a chlorine tablet 2” underground next to main stem-works everytime

  • @2thewilderness
    @2thewilderness Před 6 lety +1

    Awesome, thanks for the info.

  • @mistidiane788
    @mistidiane788 Před 6 lety +2

    My husband & I just bought 10 acres & its swimming in poison ivy! After the machines come in & clean it up some I'm gonna try this! Subscribed to your channel too.

    • @barbaramaher8483
      @barbaramaher8483 Před 5 lety

      I'd be interested to know if it worked I have a meadow covered with poison ivy and trying to figure how to get rid of - tried the vinegar salt dawn in small areas DID NOT work

  • @edwarnock4534
    @edwarnock4534 Před 6 lety +20

    I have used vinegar on some weeds with good success, however I have sprayed the same weeds with the same vinegar mix at other times with not so good results. A lot has to do with when, during the early spring when rapid growth is taking place I have seen some discoloration and in a short time the weeds recovered. The best seems to be when things are drying out and the weather is hot. Even then with poison oak (we live in the west) the leaves discolored and dried up looking dead, but the plant came back the next spring.

  • @lilyd1010
    @lilyd1010 Před 3 lety +11

    For those of u who aren't allergic - neither was I. Couldn't care less what everyone was b*tchin about. Woods, backyard, campgrounds, everyone's screaming "Look out!" I'm feeling sooo superior. LOL OK, so now I'm a lot older, a lotta years gone by just fine. Now I'm in the garden, doing the weeding, cutting, etc. When I'm done, I'm burning like I'm on fire my whole body turns into bleeding sores, my eyes won't stay open...need I go on? Went to the hospital - they don't really do much. Took me SIX weeks to even start to be normal. Still have SCARS from it. YOU CAN DEVELOP AN ALLERGY AT ANY AGE, that's the moral of this story. Poison oak is even worse. So, just be cautious, even if ur not allergic - now. :-)

    • @markraihl4249
      @markraihl4249 Před 3 lety +2

      I too didn't become allergic until I was in my 40's. The only thing that helps my reaction is Prednisone. It's the only thing that will stop the itch and skin melting.

    • @lilyd1010
      @lilyd1010 Před 3 lety +1

      @@markraihl4249 Thx Mark, always good to hear from another "late bloomer." Take care, stay outta that 3-leaf curse!

    • @coolerpetoix
      @coolerpetoix Před 10 dny

      me too!! I was smug because as a child i ran through a patch with some friends and they all got it and i didn't. then... a couple of years ago BAM... didn't even know it was in my yard... cats brought the oil to me and the sores rose up. IT WAS AWFUL.
      Last week I found some more and (from another video) mixed vinegar and salt to spray on it... didn't really work. I'm going to try one more time (with a few drops of Dawn dish detergent). I don't want to "sort of" kill it. I want it DEAD.

  • @darrellblanchard2362
    @darrellblanchard2362 Před 7 lety

    pasture guard is the stuff. it goes down into the plant killing roots and all. although about 10 sprays with vinegar will eventually kill it too by multiple defoliation

  • @francescomigliore2518
    @francescomigliore2518 Před 7 lety +5

    Another good solution is hot water and salt, water about 90° celsius .
    Prepare a solution : 1 liter of water and 500 gr. salt, mix well and apply over the leafs and at the base of roots, easy,cheap

    • @edlutheran5499
      @edlutheran5499 Před 5 lety +2

      I've been boiling water, it kills it instantly. We have some overgrown brush and all through it is poison ivy and poison oak. It gets to be a pain taking the water from the house to the back yard though. On Saturday, when I'm off work, I told my husband I'm taking a grill out back and heat water all day. We use to use round up and it still would come back. Then my son got cancer and I'll never use round up again. He has stage 4 lung, liver and bone cancer. He's seems to be on the road to recovery though, Praise God - no more round up here. I agree, the full strength vinegar works too but boiling water is cheaper if you can do it.

  • @steedandersen
    @steedandersen Před 5 lety +19

    Rock salt works good too, but nothing will grow there til the next year.

  • @georgekopczynski7533
    @georgekopczynski7533 Před 2 lety +12

    A lot of good advice out there. One very important thing.....DON'T try to burn it!!!

  • @youdoer
    @youdoer Před 4 lety

    I am trying this. Thanks. Worth a try.

  • @quinntheeskimooutdoors6234

    Thanks, great tip. Take care.

  • @bevkay4170
    @bevkay4170 Před 5 lety +5

    Husband got poison ivy rash and used Caladryl 3x first day then rubbed Clearasil acne pads over it and let air dry to absorb naturally into the skin. We used 3 acne pads per leg to make sure it was well saturated. Then did the Caladryl on top. It was gone in less than 3 days. Clearasil has salicylic acid (aspirin) & alcohol. We also used if there’s any skin issue and even to control athletes foot ...after the affected crapey leathery skin is filed away. Again, let it air dry completely before putting on socks or shoes.

  • @throttleupprepper
    @throttleupprepper Před 7 lety +5

    Good to know… But, do you know if this will work on poison oak as well?

  • @berettaboi
    @berettaboi Před 9 měsíci +2

    I've had no luck with vinegar killing poison Ivy. I put straight vinegar in a sprayer and sprayed a few times, particularly after a rain. I've had the leaves go brown, but the plant just wilts but doesn't actually die.

    • @Savannah-ed4rv
      @Savannah-ed4rv Před 7 měsíci

      I've had the same experience of spraying them with the vinegar solution and they turn fairly brown but about a week later they look like they've never been touched! My problem is I've got a lot of it growing up the side of my house and near my air conditioner. It's really awful because I don't want anyone working on my property to come in contact with it! Or me, so I may have to try the vinegar and spray every day for a couple of weeks or something? The Vines are going up my house and I pulled a lot of them down earlier this year but they grew right back. It's really an awful plant.

  • @exlporemidmo
    @exlporemidmo Před 4 lety

    Thanks-good demonstration-Dennis

  • @seviregis7441
    @seviregis7441 Před 2 lety +3

    We’ve had a lot of rain this year so my yard went absolutely crazy with poison ivy. I have a lot of wild animals that I care for so I don’t use any chemicals anywhere always try to work with organics. This looks like a really good option, maybe with a little less water. I was going to hire goats because they eat it all up and they pull up the roots too, but the local farms are booked for the summer.

    • @charlestruesdale7800
      @charlestruesdale7800 Před 2 lety

      Does this kill the roots too?

    • @freyadawn
      @freyadawn Před 2 lety

      We had goats for a short time at my grandparents. They only ate the leaves but then again they wouldn’t eat the grass 🙄 only wanted sweet feed

  • @danniellemassey3671
    @danniellemassey3671 Před 5 lety +4

    Add a little dish soap and it will work better. The soap makes it stick to the plant instead of running off.

  • @ChateauBirchwood
    @ChateauBirchwood Před 8 lety +2

    Good video and appreciate the info.

  • @Coach.Lewi.1979
    @Coach.Lewi.1979 Před 3 lety

    I've added 2 cups of table salt to 3 cups of cleaning vinegar and then filled up the 1 gallon sprayer with water. Seems to do well

  • @holton345
    @holton345 Před 7 lety +169

    Don't dilute it. Mix in a lot of salt. Mix in a few drops per quart of Dawn. Dawn helps to keep it on the leaves even if it rains. To fully kill the ivy you need to let it die for about a week. You may have to reapply. This gets the surface runners. It does NOT get the root. However, my experience says that if you kill young runners they do not come back that season. Old ones will regenerate in a few months. If you do this several years in a row it will eventually die. The *real* nightmare is getting it out. The oil (urushiol) stays active and can cause blisters on you many weeks later, under some conditions many MONTHS later. All tools must be wiped down/washed off thoroughly. All clothes must be washed in HOT water three or four times with a lot of soap. Do not use hot water on your skin, however, as that opens the pores and will cause the outbreak to be even worse.
    I have used Triclopyr and it works the best. Round-Up does not work on poison ivy AT ALL (wrong chemical) and vinegar, salt and soap work better than anything other than Triclopyr. Zanfel and Tecnu work best for your skin if used very quickly after contact. (Think minutes rather than hours. For many this is how fast the skin will absorb the urushiol.)
    I do not have the patience to make my own vinegar, but vinegar will work well, and can be used for MANY things. I have used it in my laundry to removed cat pee from clothes. I use it to remove rust from bolts, nuts, screws, etc. Vinegar is a great and useful thing to keep in your home.

    • @tibi4516
      @tibi4516 Před 7 lety +15

      Holton 345 Dawn also helps condition the soil so it may be absorbed by the roots.. tide works well and they both are great insecticides as well..
      Once it defoliate, it can no longer carry on photosynthesis. The Roots eventually die.
      I use this mixture.
      if you have insects that fly in, munch on your crop, and then fly away, add a little hot sauce to it. Take away the vinegar.
      Listerine is good too.....

    • @keithnichols6403
      @keithnichols6403 Před 7 lety +1

      Hol

    • @herwoofnessbostonterrier3420
      @herwoofnessbostonterrier3420 Před 7 lety +1

      True, Roundup does not work on P.I.,neither did the vinegar concoction, required continual and repeat applications. The commercial product worked the best.

    • @richardfoster4928
      @richardfoster4928 Před 7 lety +15

      Holton 345 True RU doesn't work on poison ivy .... which is why there is "Round-up poison ivy and tough brush killer". It is totally effective on killing the root as well as the leaves and stem. I have used it successfully on vines that extend 30-40ft up into the canopy - so have a massive root network. I chop off the vine a few feet above ground level, but leaving plenty of leaves to spray, then one application and the roots are killed.

    • @gailpugsley3211
      @gailpugsley3211 Před 7 lety +4

      Do you just leave the remains where they are?

  • @rickjwilliams
    @rickjwilliams Před 2 lety +7

    Add table salt to your vinegar until it is completely saturated with salt. Add a surfactant or (Dawn dishwashing soap) will work well. This kills most plants in 2 ways major dehydration, and acidic PH overload (The plants and ground become so acidic that it can't support growth). You will see results in as little as 1 hour depending on the plant or weed. I've even used this on Bermuda grass.

    • @scamp7887
      @scamp7887 Před rokem +1

      That's great if you don't want anything to ever grow there again. Haha

    • @AnaGarcia-dw9un
      @AnaGarcia-dw9un Před rokem

      Will this kill the roots for good?

    • @darrelsnider
      @darrelsnider Před měsícem

      Several small truckloads of each ingredient will take care of it.

    • @rickjwilliams
      @rickjwilliams Před měsícem

      @@AnaGarcia-dw9un YES!

  • @johnmartindale2419
    @johnmartindale2419 Před 6 lety

    You can add about a tablespoon of dawn dish soap to it too! If you like & spray it in the early A.M.

  • @warrenkawamoto8660
    @warrenkawamoto8660 Před 5 lety +2

    Does this really work? I'm asking because I've seen recipes for vinegar, salt, and dawn dishwashing liquid to be used on grass. However, applying it kills only the leaves. Since the roots are alive, the grass grows back in about 2 weeks. I'm wondering if this would be similar with any other plants.

  • @narutobleach115
    @narutobleach115 Před 4 lety +3

    Does it work on vines as well, because I have to pull vines from my backyard 2-3 times a week and it keeps coming back every year.

  • @joycepollitt7825
    @joycepollitt7825 Před 5 lety +38

    Container of table salt poured around it kills the roots.

    • @waltershoults7132
      @waltershoults7132 Před 3 lety +6

      Yup! We always use salt and vinegar in dish soap and it kills them right away

  • @darlenemahaven4794
    @darlenemahaven4794 Před 2 lety

    Thanx I’m going to do that.

  • @earthman7074
    @earthman7074 Před 5 lety

    I used pure vineger with salt and it is killing the leaves but there is a big hairy vine still rapped around a Chinese Privet Tree. I dread cutting the vine with a Japanese tree saw.

  • @watercarepro9610
    @watercarepro9610 Před 2 lety +6

    I bought my house which was setting on two and a half acres of land, the back acre and a half was pretty heavily wooded and I wanted to fence it in for my dogs, as I was pretty close to being finished clearing a few dense areas of foliage, a friend noticed the area I was working was loaded with poison ivy. I was working in those areas for a few days with shorts and short socks but never had any symptoms of the poison ivy.My there was no way I could be knee deep in Poison ivy and not break out, so apparently some people can be allergic to it and some people can't, I guess I'm one of the lucky ones. But I've also never had the chickenpox or mumps or measles, I never gotten a flu, I don't get colds, I have never had a headache.
    But anyway I'm glad I found this video so now I can kill it because I know my daughter is allergic to the stuff, and I didn't want to use any harsh chemicals to kill it.

    • @scamp7887
      @scamp7887 Před rokem

      Keep in mind allergies change and you may not have had exposure before. That very well could make you susceptible the next time. Don't assume you are immune.

    • @foreversettled9144
      @foreversettled9144 Před rokem

      Anyone not allergic to this stuff should spend real time worshipping God. I had it for two weeks.

  • @wesb8159
    @wesb8159 Před 7 lety +6

    I use the same mix but add salt. The salt helps in dehydration of plant and roots. But as a comment mentions it is not permanent, just inspect and hit every time you see any signs of life. Eventually they will be done.

  • @servantofthekingyeshua7455

    I love your voice its soothing

  • @mladyskirk5524
    @mladyskirk5524 Před 5 lety +1

    I like the vinegar idea, but I have poison ivy invading perennial flower beds I want to keep. I use one of those round boxes of table salt, a small bottle of cheap dishwashing liquid and a small bottle of rubbing alcohol and put these ingredients in a clean milk jug and shake it up. Just paint the mixture with an old paintbrush on the topmost leaves of the plant.
    It draws the mix into the pores of the plant and eventually kills it at the root. Can take 2-3 applications for large or stubborn plants. Cap the jug to keep the unused portion for later use.

  • @gman654
    @gman654 Před 7 lety +14

    I have a couple bottles of Wilson brand poison ivy killer from the 80's. It also says for "Woody Plants". FYI. I wish I had gallons of the stuff.

    • @normamiller4251
      @normamiller4251 Před 4 lety +1

      Oh for the good old days

    • @chris2fer1977
      @chris2fer1977 Před 3 lety +4

      It actually worked soooo they took it off the shelfs. Typical now a days

  • @williamburych2136
    @williamburych2136 Před 2 lety +27

    The question is : How can you kill the roots ? Poison Oak has the same effect on the skin as poison ivy. It may be found as a vine climbing a tree.

    • @ToddKing
      @ToddKing Před rokem +5

      Poison Ivy also climbs trees. Even on the ground, it propagates by running little vines or runner from one plant to the next.

    • @GoingGreenMom
      @GoingGreenMom Před rokem +1

      I find this interesting. I've never had much luck with even straight vinegar in full sun. I've been using dead weed brew on poison sumac which also kills foliage but not roots. On driveway weeds I've had a little more luck with boiling water than vinegar, but straight baking soda or salt seems to be the most affective..... works on the driveway, not so much in my flower beds where the sumac keeps coming back.

    • @berettaboi
      @berettaboi Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@GoingGreenMom I've also had very little luck with vinegar killing poison Ivy.... I guess smothering with a tarp or otherwise is probably the ultimate way, but unsure how long the roots remain alive

  • @Asian_Connection
    @Asian_Connection Před 4 lety +2

    Doesn't the poison ivy oil stay active in the soil for 5 years or does it neutralize the oil also?

  • @lucy2b1
    @lucy2b1 Před 8 lety

    Did you pull the roots? How many times did you spray? Pls and thank you

  • @igotajopamerica3040
    @igotajopamerica3040 Před 5 lety +65

    I just put a little splash of gasoline on the stem and root(Don't light it).
    The next day it's dead and it don't come back.

    • @dizzolve
      @dizzolve Před 4 lety

      Just one little part of the plant or anywhere you see it? Thanks

    • @igotajopamerica3040
      @igotajopamerica3040 Před 4 lety +2

      @@dizzolve try and put it right on the root. Right at the base of the plant.but if you get it on more it doesn't matter becouse your trying to kill it.

    • @igotajopamerica3040
      @igotajopamerica3040 Před 4 lety +1

      @@dizzolve I have vine and plant style around my area. If it's vine at the root and if it's plant style I put gas directly on top of plant so it goes down the stem to the roots.

    • @dizzolve
      @dizzolve Před 4 lety +2

      @@igotajopamerica3040 I see what you're saying now. Thanks! DeytookOWRCHOBS

  • @radarhouse6443
    @radarhouse6443 Před 5 lety +12

    Add some red food coloring to help you see where you've sprayed.

  • @jude1515
    @jude1515 Před 6 lety +1

    Do you have to do this periodically as new plants come up?

  • @The1Ghost27
    @The1Ghost27 Před 5 lety +2

    a box of baking soda per gallon of water soap if you wish. drench the area well with the mix. the soda will raise the ph in the soil kill the roots and everything. so where you pour it make sure you dont want anything growing for awhile. A box per gallon is over kill but works well. So does undiluted vinegar which will lower ph and burn the plant. Both will solve the problem without chemical worry.

  • @norakaszuba
    @norakaszuba Před 4 lety +12

    A huge thank you for educating me about this. This afternoon I spent in my wooded area, which has become a jungle of vines, poison ivy, and wild raspberries, and I spent the afternoon pulling up the vines, which are endless. I am tired of it overtaking everything. Afterwards, I spotted some vinegar in my garage and applied straight vinegar (oops?) onto the area where I had worked hoping to kill the roots and vines that remain. Do you think it will? I refused to use Roundup and was trying the vinegar because I have read about this, but now I have learned it is not straight vinegar, but a one to four ratio. Thank you!

    • @SurvivalistGardener
      @SurvivalistGardener  Před 4 lety +3

      The straight vinegar could work...but it will kill everything you want to grow there. Thats why I dont use that inside my garden.

    • @norakaszuba
      @norakaszuba Před 4 lety

      Thanks! I do not want it to kill any trees, so I will be mindful. I appreciate your response!

  • @rogerwhiting9310
    @rogerwhiting9310 Před 5 lety +30

    2 cups of Epsom salt dissolved in one gallon of white vinegar and a squirt of dish soap works well.

    • @brucetominello7440
      @brucetominello7440 Před 4 lety +1

      Roger Whiting table salt works as well and cheaper. One and one half cups salt to one gallon of vinegar and NOTHING will grow there for a long time.

    • @jasonjohnson3424
      @jasonjohnson3424 Před 4 lety

      What does the salt add to the equation?

  • @giraffesnbutterflies
    @giraffesnbutterflies Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for the informative video!

  • @dianeculver2915
    @dianeculver2915 Před 6 lety

    Thank you!

  • @ajalicea1091
    @ajalicea1091 Před 3 lety +20

    Not sure if this would be a good alternative to anyone.
    As a child growing up, I knew some adults who would take sassafras buds in the early spring and swallow them like they were an aspirin.
    Was told that there is something in the sassafras buds that will help the body fight off the poison oils.
    It seems to work even still to this day if you can find the sassafras.

    • @marlinmyers2117
      @marlinmyers2117 Před 2 lety +4

      Hmm I’m not allergic to poison ivy. I wonder if that is due to me drinking sassafras tea made from the roots as a kid.

    • @j.tamburello4053
      @j.tamburello4053 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a ton of sassafras growing on my property. Smells fantastic and makes a great tea. Didn’t know this though!

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 Před 2 lety +1

      @@marlinmyers2117 I've never been affected by poison ivy either - and as a former infantryman, I had a LOT of contact with it over the years. Turns out my mother was immune as well (obviously it can be hereditary!).

    • @marlinmyers2117
      @marlinmyers2117 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nickh5081 It’s not hereditary for me my mom dad and brother are allergic to it. I’m not saying it couldn’t be something genetic keeping me from being allergic. It was me and my cousins who drank the tea ate buds and leaves and such. My cousin had a whole bunch of sassafras growing in the woods behind his house. Spent the whole summer drinking sassafras sweet tea not saying it was the reason why me not being allergic. it could also be the amount of exposure to poison ivy I’ve had over the years and maybe built up resistance but can’t ever remember being allergic and spent my whole childhood in the woods that’s what we did for fun. My current property has lots of poison ivy all over it and I walk thru it and mow it down all the time with no reaction. Who knows why I don’t have a reaction but found AJ’s reply above interesting that’s all.

    • @nickh5081
      @nickh5081 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marlinmyers2117 Like I said, my mother was, but my brother had a worse reaction than 99% of people (he'd get it in the middle of winter from a sleeping bag). I figure most people are not immune, so having two in one family told me genetics likely had something to do with it in my case. FYI, I knew a few other guys in the army that were immune but eventually got it after years - like their immunity finally broke down over time. I always avoid it regardless of the fact I've never been affected.

  • @gloriarood1523
    @gloriarood1523 Před 7 lety +13

    thankyou to all who have contributed to the info of safely killing poison ivy.

  • @BFArch0n
    @BFArch0n Před 3 lety +2

    I used pure viniger with a little salt and dish soap and it had zero affect. Used a full gallon.

    • @brianpayne4549
      @brianpayne4549 Před 3 lety

      Use acne medication, “oxy”, or something similar. It’s going to weep, so be on guard with a napkin, tissue, or paper towel.

  • @joeyojoeyo3613
    @joeyojoeyo3613 Před 6 lety +1

    Good stuff, I wonder what would happen by throwing baking soda on the leaves after spraying with the vinegar solution.

    • @kissedbysun2517
      @kissedbysun2517 Před 4 lety

      That would react with the vinegar leaving a bit of salty water, would reduce the effectiveness of the vinegar

  • @billcampbell9886
    @billcampbell9886 Před 6 lety +29

    This only kills the leaves, which quickly grow back.

  • @beckiejani7782
    @beckiejani7782 Před 5 lety +7

    Just got back from the walk-in clinic, they said always clean up with Dawn after yard work.

    • @wandastevens3183
      @wandastevens3183 Před 4 lety

      Yep,clean up with Dawn...please !!!

    • @SuperCarRaces
      @SuperCarRaces Před 4 lety +1

      Tecnu works great!

    • @alaysiakayebutler6299
      @alaysiakayebutler6299 Před 4 lety +1

      Arm and Hammer Washing Soda scrub.

    • @beckiejani7782
      @beckiejani7782 Před 4 lety

      And here I am again! Just finished a round of prednisone for 2020!

    • @freezo244
      @freezo244 Před 3 lety +1

      It’s the friction of rubbing that gets it off. If you just think washing with soap will do it, you’ll be sorry. Dawn is better than Technu at getting the oil off, but be sure you scrub yosself real good.

  • @woodymoto2326
    @woodymoto2326 Před rokem +1

    After using RoundUp (glyphosate), made by Monsanto/Bayer, what do you do to get rid of nonhodgkins Lymphoma and other cancers?

  • @olgamarchenko6576
    @olgamarchenko6576 Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much !!!

  • @bassmaster8311
    @bassmaster8311 Před 4 lety +5

    If poison oak is completely dried out can it still give you a rash when you make contact?
    Best way to remove it after spraying and letting it dry out ?

  • @87Rado
    @87Rado Před 4 lety +4

    Never had any luck with this, even tried straight vinegar, and sprayed 2 and 3 days in a row. Tried it with Dawn, with Epsom salt, without. Just keeps growing

    • @tiberio1352
      @tiberio1352 Před 3 lety

      :) just yank them out. With gloves of course. Use long sleeves.

    • @87Rado
      @87Rado Před 3 lety

      @@tiberio1352 Well yes that is a given. I was just saying I haven't had luck with this method.

    • @tiberio1352
      @tiberio1352 Před 3 lety

      @@87Rado after you do it....clean your gloves grabbing a bunch of dry leaves and rub your gloves vigorously...very important. :)

    • @claresage
      @claresage Před 3 lety

      need special very high concentrate of vinegar 35% or maybe 75%, regular vinegar is only 5%, but be much more careful of safety with higher concentrates

    • @87Rado
      @87Rado Před 3 lety

      Where do you find that?

  • @DrOrson
    @DrOrson Před 4 lety +1

    Does 100% vinegar work better or is the dilution important?

  • @carolthompson753
    @carolthompson753 Před 4 lety +1

    Good information.

  • @willdwyer6782
    @willdwyer6782 Před 5 lety +48

    I use one gallon of distilled vinegar 1 cup of salt and 8 drops of liquid dish detergent. No water is necessary.

    • @aggie05too30
      @aggie05too30 Před 5 lety +8

      I used this method and it absolutely worked for me. It killed all the weeds within a a few days and they have not come back. It is true that this solution will kill everything it lands on so just becareful to not spray what you don't want dead. Also, I did not use water just vinegar, salt and soap.

    • @ritamccartt-kordon283
      @ritamccartt-kordon283 Před 5 lety +2

      How long before you can plant this area?

    • @biga8230
      @biga8230 Před 5 lety

      Will it kill a tree if the ivy is near it?

    • @dreascornelias7021
      @dreascornelias7021 Před 5 lety +3

      Rita McCartt-Kordon I wouldn’t plant there unless you plan to dig up the poison ivy/oak to make sure it won’t grow back

    • @Asian_Connection
      @Asian_Connection Před 4 lety +3

      @@aggie05too30 - Doesn't the poison ivy oil stay active in the soil for 5 years or does it neutralize the oil also?

  • @SkinnyMedic
    @SkinnyMedic Před 8 lety +174

    I get itchy just watching this video!

    • @beobe99
      @beobe99 Před 5 lety +4

      Me too, I actually think I'm starting to get a rash.

    • @RavenVargas27
      @RavenVargas27 Před 5 lety

      Same here

    • @chunho3477
      @chunho3477 Před 4 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @evangelinebelami8716
      @evangelinebelami8716 Před 3 lety +4

      Here's an old home remedy if you get poison ivy (and the other poisonous plants)
      If you know or just think you've been exposed, as soon as you go in wash in a hot of water as you can stand and soap (dawn works great for breaking up the oils)
      After you rense in the hot water don't dry off
      Pour salt all over the affected at areas. Cake it on! And just wait.....
      Any place that stings is where the poison is. Continue to wait.....
      Then it will itch, at this point you'll talk bad about me cause you can't scratch it!!! Continue to wait...
      When the salt falls off, the itch will have stopped and you're done when that happens.
      It takes about 10 to 15 minutes for the whole process but it's worth it!
      If you do this immediately after exposure, you won't get it. If you wait to do this after you've gotten it, it will cut the time on it but you know, unfortunately you are already suffering it.
      I personally leave the salt residue on me after it falls off and don't wash it until I am ready to shower. Sorry this was so long but I had to share. It just breaks my heart to see people affected when the remedy is so cheap and easy, less time consuming if you were to get it. It works!!

    • @wingerrrrrrrrr
      @wingerrrrrrrrr Před 3 lety

      Try something called Domeboro. It really seems to dry up the poison ivy rash and blistering in short order, if you're unfortunate enough to have gotten it.

  • @earthman7074
    @earthman7074 Před 5 lety

    Does vinegar and salt kill Poison Ivy Vines? After you kill the poison ivy do you have to remove it?

  • @rogerhoward7104
    @rogerhoward7104 Před 5 lety

    I used a saturated salt water, dawn dish soap, and some bleach to kill weeds, and it killed everything that it got on good or bad. But is the oil in the plant, even if the plants end, is the oil still active?

  • @chriscole5266
    @chriscole5266 Před 3 lety +4

    Salad dressing for the goats! I bet they appreciate it.

  • @lindanitzschke1315
    @lindanitzschke1315 Před 2 lety +16

    If it weren't too hard a task, I'd use boiling water, as that's going to do the roots, too, if you do the job right. I would guess soft water would work better than just hard water, too, since that will kill grass even without the soft water being heated. My mom used boiling water in an area where she wanted clear an area to start a garden...it killed everything.

    • @followyourheart7818
      @followyourheart7818 Před rokem +1

      Boiling water was the only thing that worked for me.

    • @ggshandsomeboy5103
      @ggshandsomeboy5103 Před rokem

      Turn up the temp on the water heater, connect a hot water hose to the washing machine hot water outlet and spray those weeds dead.

  • @itgetter9
    @itgetter9 Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much!

  • @blunitesky123
    @blunitesky123 Před měsícem

    I've used in the past this stuff that you only have to spray on the plant itself and it travels down throughout the vine, roots and runners and kills the whole plant. It's been quite a few years since we've had a PI infection. I can't remember what it was called. I did purchase it at HD.

  • @tokuzumi1
    @tokuzumi1 Před 7 lety +20

    I went to war with poison ivy several years ago in my yard. I took a shovel, and was stabbing the ground in all directions wherever a vine was sticking out. I still get the occasional sprout, but I have basically eradicated poison ivy from my yard.

    • @user-lf4td9xr4v
      @user-lf4td9xr4v Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! I will do that. I think that's a better idea actually.

    • @pixelkitty2583
      @pixelkitty2583 Před 2 lety +2

      The only way to completely eradicate it. Pull those vines out of the ground, dispose of them. Don't burn them.