benz66
Used to sell firewood for $5 a face cord, deliverd
The way to control poison ivy is to wait until fall. In fall, (november) in the dark of the moon, I go out and cut 1' to 3' out of the base of the vine, then let it die. In Nov, the leaves are off, it is doemant, and the oil is minimal. I am very allergic to it, but never have a a problem in Nov, as long as I am careful. In Nov. you can also dig/pull up the roots of any that is growing on the ground. If you do this between the last quarter and the full moon, you almost never get regrowth. I just put on leather gloves and pull the stuffout and pile it to rot for a couple years. Then you can burn it. The vines, I just let rot in the tree.
You can cut the vine in a tree carefully any time of the year, but if it is in the light of the moon, it will regrow. Best to cut the vine in the dark of the moon.
I had terrible poison ivy around my house in IA I built in 1980. Every Nov it was cut/pull poison ivy and poison oak. Got rid of most of it in a year or two, but the birds keep seeding it.
My grandfather, a farmer/logger, said the best time to cut logs is the dark of the moon in Feb. I gather that was to prevent regrowth on the stump, and also for the least sap/weight to handle the logs. Logs were loaded on sleds with a team and ropes. I loaded my big logs that way too, but with a tractor to pull the ropes. (not a horseman)
You can kill it on the ground with chemicals, but not up in a tree. The chemicals are expensive. Cutting/pulling is not. I make sure to leave the leather gloves out in the sun, palm side up to neutralize the oils.
You can cut the vine in a tree carefully any time of the year, but if it is in the light of the moon, it will regrow. Best to cut the vine in the dark of the moon.
I had terrible poison ivy around my house in IA I built in 1980. Every Nov it was cut/pull poison ivy and poison oak. Got rid of most of it in a year or two, but the birds keep seeding it.
My grandfather, a farmer/logger, said the best time to cut logs is the dark of the moon in Feb. I gather that was to prevent regrowth on the stump, and also for the least sap/weight to handle the logs. Logs were loaded on sleds with a team and ropes. I loaded my big logs that way too, but with a tractor to pull the ropes. (not a horseman)
You can kill it on the ground with chemicals, but not up in a tree. The chemicals are expensive. Cutting/pulling is not. I make sure to leave the leather gloves out in the sun, palm side up to neutralize the oils.