I might get some of the 2-4d stuff as well to soak the ground.
You will just be throwing your $$ away. 2-4D like glysophate is a post emergent not a pre-emergent herbicide. It needs to be applied to foliage and then translocate to roots.
I might get some of the 2-4d stuff as well to soak the ground.
At least you did not help your grandfather gather it(and all the brush) from a fence line and burn it...making sure your young dumb self breathed in the smoke.I can't add to the conversation about killing it, but I once stripped a whole mess of it off a tree without realizing and I bundled it all up and bear hug walked it to the trash can. It got everywhere on my body. And I mean EVERYWHERE!
I was covered head to toe for more than week. It was awful. The only thing that would relieve the itch was a scalding hot shower. And that only worked for a few minutes.
Yeah, burning it is bad. I've heard of people dying from breathing the smoke. Very rare with proper medical treatment, but it has happened.At least you did not help your grandfather gather it(and all the brush) from a fence line and burn it...making sure your young dumb self breathed in the smoke.
I was in the hospital for 6 days with poison ivy in my lungs(was 9-10 at the time)and covering most of my body.
I did acquire immunity from it though. I can roll in it ever since and not get even a bump on my skin.
Been there once as a kid.. awful.. in nose, mouth, eyes.Yup, burning is bad. When I was a kid my eyes swelled shut, Dr. said someone must have burned poison ivy or oak since it was mostly on/in mouth and eyes. I then remembered a neighbor having there burn barrel going and the awful smoke smell a day or two before the symptoms. Was a miserable week or so. Still remember getting that shot, think it was cortisone, felt almost immediate relief.
Surfactants are often sold in the same places as herbicides. Non-ionic surfactants make most water-based herbicides work better so you use less.Poison Ivy/oak has slick leaves. If the chemical calls for so much added per gallon of water add the same amount of dish soap. It will make the chemical cling to the plant better.
I use lemon scented Ajax. You'll find citrus essential oils in organic mosquito sprays
Or tools. That oil transfers easily from plant to an axe , hoe , those dirty hoes are the worst...Just want to point out that killing the plant with herbicides does not make them safe to handle. You will still get the oil on you from dead plants.
Active ingredient is Triclopyr.
I spray around my barn & pond with this stuff twice a year, in late spring and late summer; in fact its due for it after I mow next.
It takes 3-4 weeks to kill poison ivy, but it does...and it really stunts future growth. Doesn't really hurt grass either, can yellow it a bit if applied heavily (I mix mine pretty strong) but won't kill it.