View Full Version : Management Of Poison Ivy Around Trees?
Sarah_R
02-17-2016, 04:23 PM
Hi, if this has been addressed somewhere else, please point it out to me and I will delete this thread :)
We are located in Eastern Ontario, Canada, and this will be our first year tapping the trees on our 14 acre property.
We have some really nice maples, and of course they're located right in a huge patch of poison ivy. :(
I was wondering if anybody else has dealt with this issue? Mainly I'm wondering about the use of RoundUP or Brush B-Gone; will this go into the soil and harm the trees and/or end up in the sap? Is there a specific amount of time I should wait before using these trees again? I can't find any information on this anywhere else.
Thoughts and ideas?
Thanks gang! :)
Cedar Eater
02-17-2016, 06:35 PM
I have a lot of experience with RoundUp, but not in this context. I know that it will kill trees through their roots if sprayed very heavily and indiscriminately to the point where it never dries before contacting the roots. In this situation, I would consider very careful spot spraying or even brushing a wet towel or even a paint brush over the poison ivy leaves. You don't have to touch every leaf. Usually 2-3 per vine is good enough. I'm going to make the assumption that poison ivy qualifies as a broadleaf and suggest a broadleaf-specific herbicide called 2-4-D or Weedar 64. This can be mixed with RoundUp or just mixed with water. Commercial grade herbicide can be purchased at a feed store. The kind of RoundUp you can get at Home Depot isn't likely to be strong enough to kill poison ivy.
happy thoughts
02-17-2016, 06:39 PM
Can you call your local ag office or maple producers association? I searched for info on weed control in the sugarbush and didn't come up with much anywhere, not even the UVM Proctor site or Cornell. I saw mention of herbicide use to control invasives in the sugarbush at UVM but no mention of which herbicides to use. Maybe Dr Tim will see this and be able to point you in the right direction.
I know getting rid of it can be tough. How much can you mow or cut now while it's cold and you're better covered? From my own experience, Roundup alone isn't going to kill it easily and Brush b Gon isn't recommended around food crops. I just went to the ortho site and logged into their chat. They suggested roundup poison ivy plus. That isn't recommended around food crops either per the label so I’m not sure I trust their recommendation. They did tell me this product's half life was 45 days (means half of the product degrades in that time) and that 90% degrades within 6 months.
Here's my thoughts on that:
Maple roots spread wide and shallow so potential for getting into sap seems high to me.
I don't know what the product degrades into and if that would still be a concern for food safety especially in sap which ends up highly concentrated for syrup.
You have to apply herbicides during the growing season and you'll probably need to reapply it several times. Assuming a final application at the end of this year's growing season, you'll still have 10% or more of this product still hanging around next sugar season.
Maybe someone has some ideas of better info. Or maybe you just need a goat :)
maple maniac65
02-17-2016, 08:18 PM
A goat that does not chew maple trees.
WVKeith
02-18-2016, 08:19 AM
Round-up can easily kill or harm Maple Trees. One day I saw the grounds keepers at work spraying round-up around several ornamental fruit tress to keep the grass down around the tree instead of weed whacking. I thought this looked like a great idea, so I tried it in the yard at my house. Weed whacked first, then sprayed some round-up. I was careful about not spraying on the trees (all maples) or using too much. About once a month, I re-sprayed on any clumps of grass that came up. Looked great, but next year, a couple of the smaller (< 15 in dia.) died and other trees lost many lower branches. At work, they ended up removing all of the ornamental fruit trees. Guess they did know as much about weed control as I thought.
I will not use round-up around any tress that I value again.
wildlifewarrior
02-18-2016, 10:50 AM
My father killed a 3 tap maple tree growing up with a 6 inch ring of roundup around the base to ease the weed sacking that needed to be done….
Goats should be fine as long as there are no low branches for them to chew.
Mike
Cedar Eater
02-18-2016, 11:22 AM
Weed whacked first, then sprayed some round-up. I was careful about not spraying on the trees (all maples) or using too much. About once a month, I re-sprayed on any clumps of grass that came up.
Weed whacking first and then so often contributed to the problem. RoundUp works on weeds by being absorbed through the leaves, then it is transported down to the roots. By cutting the leaves off first, that much more RU got down onto the soil and the weeds weren't killed as effectively. Maple roots run shallow, so you don't want any RU that hits the ground to soak in.
KevinS
02-18-2016, 11:43 AM
I use toradon on poison ivy. you cut off the largest stem you can find of it. and put ONE DROP on the cut. if it is a big clump start with no more than two stems, well apart from each other. when I say one drop. I mean one drop from an eye dropper.
leave the stem long also. never spray it. never use a lot. do not even treat a bunch of vines per year close to each other. one drop on a cut branch WILL kill a large mature tree..it might take a year or two but the tree will die.
this stuff will travel through the root system and get other vines that are above ground from the same root system
I also would not tap those trees in the treated area for a year
BreezyHill
02-18-2016, 05:51 PM
There is an organic farmer near me and he said many times that vinegar will kill all weeds and leave the trees alone. He uses it on fences and his trees look fine and he PUTS it Down. .
Sarah_R
02-18-2016, 06:58 PM
Thanks, I'll try that, too and see how it works!
Sarah_R
02-18-2016, 06:58 PM
Wow, that sounds like strong stuff! I will try to find it for sure around here. Thank you!
Sarah_R
02-18-2016, 07:00 PM
I LOVE goats, but my husband won't let me have them, LOL!
Sarah_R
02-18-2016, 07:01 PM
Thanks for your research! Very much appreciate it :)
Sarah_R
02-18-2016, 07:02 PM
I will keep an eye out for those brands, thanks very much! :)
KevinS
02-18-2016, 07:11 PM
how heavy of an application? my wife and I tried and tried to kill weeds with it. so far it just stunts them a little.
For the record I would love to use it instead. most weeds we do not bother worrying to much about. the ones in the brick walk and the poison ivy are fair game though
mellondome
02-18-2016, 08:44 PM
I LOVE goats, but my husband won't let me have them, LOL!
You should thank him for this.
Sarah there's a few things that can be done as suggested get a grazer, a Sheep, Goat, Cow, Llama that will munch it down like candy. If not then I'd really not fret about the PI as it's winter and it's buried under the snow, and it would be a minor inconvenience come spring. Once it's exposed just wear high rubber boots, rinse them off before touching them with the bare hands. If you touch the bare skin take an alcohol wipe and clean the spot. In the summer take Jewel Weed (natures remedy) and it takes the effects of the PI away. It's also great for most other bug bites, as Deer flies, mosquitos, and other blood sucking insects, takes away the swelling and itch in minutes.https://altnature.com/jewelweed.htm
Tordon is picloram, and most of the formulations are RUP (restricted use pesticide), meaning you need a pesticide application license. Picloram has a high probability of moving into groundwater.
I would ask myself a question: Maple Syrup is one of natures purest treats, organic one could say, why would I want to be spraying nasty chemicals around the tree? The tree might just suck it up and pass it along to the sap, it might not that's another whole topic. But seriously think about what the end result by using a chemical treatment.
WARNING: DO NOT BURN POISON IVY, THE SMOKE WILL MESS YOUR LUNGS UP BAD. It's like having the blisters on the inside and not a good thing.
Verona mills sugar maple
03-02-2016, 10:32 PM
Spraying salt water works good for me.
Burnt sap
03-17-2016, 08:48 AM
I pull it out by the roots sometimes a run can go 20-40 feet from the root. It never has bothered me guess I'm lucky my wife just has to look at it and she starts itching:D This is a good time to pull and remove it.
bmbmkr
07-27-2016, 10:26 PM
We just moved back home my family farm, 54 acres and 53 of it has poison ivy. Our land is half pasture/hay and half timber, luckily a lot of sugar, red and silver maples! The poison ivy has vines as thick as my arm growing up the tulip poplars and some of the silver maples along the creek that borders the front half of the farm. There are small vines growing on some of the trees along the edge off the woodline, and single plants growing along the edge of the pastures and into the yard. My wife got it so bad back in May when we got here, she had to get two prednisone (spelling?)shots, and a bunch of prescription antihistamines. She ended up taking tumeric, Vit B3 and C, and Se drank alot of goat milk, from goats that had been eating poison ivy, and used jewelweed as someone before mentioned. Now she'll get it, but only a small blister or two as opposed to the hue belts of blisters she had a few months ago. She also practically bathes in dawn dish soap after being anywhere near the poison. I have been chopping the vines near the roots of the trees, and the goats have been taking care of what's in the woods, as far as the edges of the grass, the weedeater and lawnmower. We rotate the goats with fence panels and electric netting, they like wild roses better, but eat the poison ivy too. Goats are a pain in the rear at first, but once you get used to em, they have twice the personality of dogs, and the kids are worth their weight in entertainment. We are up to 11, Saanens, Nubian and Nigerian Dwarf. I rew up on a beef farm, but goat milk is the bomb, one of our Nigerians makes enough cream so we can make butter and ice cream, nothin like homemade ice cream with maple syrup and black walnuts! Good luck!!
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.7 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.