How to identify and kill poison ivy! And flying the drone in the woods! MCG video #16

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2020
  • Do you hate poison ivy as much as I do? Learn how to identify and how to get rid of poison ivy. I also use the DJI Mavic Air drone to inspect the top of a tree where poison ivy has taken it over. I also talk a bit about how to avoid the poison ivy rash. I'll also answer the questions, does poison ivy spread, and is poison ivy contagious.
    I'm no expert. These are just my experiences in dealing with poison ivy on my property for the past 30 years. For entertainment purposes only. Search term MCG Poison Ivy.
    Husqvarna 455 Chainsaw (Amazon affiliate link):
    amzn.to/3nUMldP
    #MCGtube #MCGtv #poisionivy #MavicAir #killingpoisonivy
    Short Guitar Clip by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    Artist: audionautix.com/

Комментарии • 951

  • @nicholaslacovara2381
    @nicholaslacovara2381 4 года назад +329

    Warning if you are cutting poison plants and if you forget to wear gloves do not pee in the woods.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +26

      Nicholas Lacovara haha! I didn’t mention that in the video but been there, done that! 🙄😂

    • @scottymcnabb4947
      @scottymcnabb4947 2 года назад +17

      That happened to me when I was a kid. I ripped off a vine that was attached to my buddy's shed. Later on I had to pee and lets just say I spent the next two weeks in agony. I'm old now and I haven't had it in over 20 years. Caught it many times in my younger days but those two weeks were the worst!

    • @ISCARSman
      @ISCARSman Год назад +4

      So true!!!

    • @carolyndowdyvictor1625
      @carolyndowdyvictor1625 Год назад +22

      Buy 2-goats. They will take care of it. Make sure have have a good fence and a place where they can stay dry.

    • @carenallen5841
      @carenallen5841 Год назад +1

      Tue

  • @hj8607
    @hj8607 2 года назад +125

    Plan on giving the dog a DAWN liquid shower .
    AND NIX on the chain saw idea . The air born dust is just as dangerous as smoke . USE AN AX .

    • @singatune
      @singatune Год назад

      I pick raspberries and had scratches. My dogs got into poison ivy. Every scratch had poison ivy. I rubbed eyes. I was a mess. Needed medical care. It oozed pus like a slow running nose down my legs. I was bedridden about 6 weeks. Miserable. My nephew had it in eyes and was hospitalized. In fall it makes berries. Birds eat berries. When I spot any poison ivy in gardens or near living area, I spay it a light blue so people stay clear. Dark plastic placed over it with a weight can deprive it of sunlight. NEVER BURN. The only way you can really kill it is to dig it up by root. Poison kills all plants and is not good for people either. A good way to clear a forest area is to hire some goat farmer. Cut a clean cut on vines and apply poison on stem before sap dries and forms a seal. DO NOT TOUCH ANY OF YOUR CLOTHS OR YOUR FACE WITH GLOVES. Have bottles of water and dawn to use outside before getting in your vehicle. Have a change of clothes and change to your skivies. A plastic bag for your contaminated clothes. Leave your pets at home.

    • @ChrisAthanas
      @ChrisAthanas Год назад +8

      Yes use axe!

    • @ronaldbrown5745
      @ronaldbrown5745 24 дня назад

      Use a small buck saw.

    • @Blackwick914
      @Blackwick914 7 дней назад

      I was just telling my wife concerns about the dog and chain saw, then I read your comment😅

  • @MPOULL
    @MPOULL Год назад +47

    Simple, effective treatment for the poison ivy rash, wet oatmeal plaster. I am a retired nurse, was the "camp nurse" for many Girl Scout camps. I kept a very lg. box of instant oatmeal on hand. Oatmeal has a natural anti-histamine, and the paste absorbs and neutralizes the oil. Works for bug bites and stings also.

    • @joefish4466
      @joefish4466 11 месяцев назад +3

      Not a histamine reaction, which is why anti-histamines generally do not work on PI rash. Nothing has been proven to be satisfactorily effective. There are dozens of equally effective methods for helping with the rash. The oils get absorbed within 10-30 minutes so your treatment does little to neutralize the oil after that time. Should wash exposed areas with soap/dish detergent for atleast 5 minutes within 10-30 minutes, to reduce chance for rash development. Potent topical steroids can help withing 24-48 hours of onset. Oral steroids are probably overkill, unless affecting specific body regions. Many things can help with itch symptoms, from alcohol, calamine, ice pack, oatmeal to peroxide.

  • @jeffsanders7691
    @jeffsanders7691 Год назад +25

    Anyone else here because they can basically look at poison ivy and they’ll get it all over their body and end up needing prescription medication?

    • @smithknifeworks
      @smithknifeworks Месяц назад +3

      Wash and scrub with dawn soap with 2-8 hours and you'll never have a reaction again. Treat it like you're cleaning off motor oil.

    • @dondale68
      @dondale68 Месяц назад +1

      @@smithknifeworks I treat it like I've got transmission fluid in my hair AGAIN!! If DAWN is gentle enough for baby ducks, it must be fine for me!!

  • @davidhomer78
    @davidhomer78 Год назад +94

    It does spread through the root system. I have pulled a lot of it up and the roots are connected. The ones you cut will come up through the roots. Those plants on the ground at the base of the tree are part of the same plant. It will take the plant quite a while to climb up the tree again but it will. I would have used a bow saw to cut that large vine. Safer and easier to clean.

    • @trumpetingangel
      @trumpetingangel Год назад +10

      Indeed - I cannot count the times I've sprayed or cut it and seen it grow back in a few months. Poison ivy removers dig out the roots, but it's extremely hard to get it all.

    • @janetcalvert3959
      @janetcalvert3959 Год назад

      Think it's a justifiable reason using a herbicide. Do not burn it.

    • @ironrose888
      @ironrose888 Год назад +2

      I thought I had many poison ivy plants in my flower bed but it was only one big root that spread.

  • @susankarnes2100
    @susankarnes2100 Год назад +101

    I'm 75 years young. My great grandmother would have us drink 4 to 5 juice glasses full of cream of tarter juice a day. It dried it up from the inside out and within 24 hrs the itching stopped. Mixture is made with 2 TBS cream of tarter to 1 pt water. Keep in fridge, shake well before drinking. I also gave it to my youngins, and now my grands, and great grands. Has a lemoney taste.

    • @Enchanted_Daisy
      @Enchanted_Daisy Год назад +2

    • @garycasper2929
      @garycasper2929 Год назад +2

      What is cream of tartar juice and where do you get or how do you make it.?

    • @rachelphelps6347
      @rachelphelps6347 Год назад +10

      @@garycasper2929 Cream of tarter is bought at the grocery store and used usually in meringue in pies, but has other uses too. It'll be close to the spices and/or in the baking aisle. Then you mix it with the water to make the juice. Also if you get into poison ivy and then have a good shower afterwards using a wash cloth to really scrub good, sometimes it won't hurt you.

    • @lori6911
      @lori6911 Год назад +12

      Thanks for this tip. I have a case of poson Ivy now. I’m going to research the Cream of Tartar and try your remedy. I’ll return with the results.

    • @susankarnes2100
      @susankarnes2100 Год назад +1

      @@garycasper2929 it's used for baking. Is in with the spices at ur grocery store.

  • @lindabaker667
    @lindabaker667 Год назад +143

    Use non-latex gloves. The oil will penetrate rubber and latex. Also, wash with COLD water. Hot water will open the pores and help spread the oil on your body!

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +12

      Good points!

    • @mse7501
      @mse7501 Год назад +2

      @@MyClutteredGarage I pull out poison oak off the walls of my house without gloves. Update. I had five leaves not 3. It was Virginia creeper oh, it had never bothered me before and boy howdy I got into a world of hurt

    • @garycasper2929
      @garycasper2929 Год назад +5

      @@mse7501 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

    • @mse7501
      @mse7501 Год назад +7

      @@garycasper2929 Have it bad in my back yard. My ex. son and his gf mowed the yard for me and they all broke out really bad. My ex was so mad. I told him you act like I planted the crap.

    • @mse7501
      @mse7501 Год назад +5

      @@garycasper2929 Have a big tree that died due to a freeze a few yrs ago. It's covered in poison oak. Even Mexicans won't cut it down. Ha

  • @rubytuby6369
    @rubytuby6369 Год назад +9

    With a big vine like that what do you want to do is get a quarter inch drill, and drill several holes into it at a downward angle. Then I take a round up, concentrate and fill the holes. The vine absorbs the round up, kills the plant the roots everything.

  • @rossrogalski6813
    @rossrogalski6813 Год назад +21

    Got a few notes to add. Hope this will help.
    1) Would suggest cutting poison ivy in the deep-winter time when the sap is down. Yes, there will still be oil in the stems, but getting splattered by ivy "juice" is far less likely in late January and Early February. In many areas sap starts to rise by the middle to late February.
    2) For modest sized vines that can be cut with a heavy duty loppers, this is preferable to making resin filled dust with a chain saw. Then only the blades of the loppers need to be cleaned before making contact with unprotected skin.
    3) Agree that removing a couple inches of vine is a highly effective way to kill the upper part of the vine and inhibit seed production. The surrounding woodland floor will have many small plants as long as the vines are permitted to grow on the leaves.
    4) I've seen large poison ivy vines get the "cut and remove a section" treatment resprout vines the following spring time. It's a good idea to follow-up a winter time vine section removal with a series of "brush killer" herbicide treatments the following year. The advantage is that the clump of foliage is small, easily identified, and only a limited quantity of localized chemical treatment is needed on each vine-stump location.
    This is a definite plus when the vines are growing up trees adjacent to a creek bed or similar water source. Be prepared to spot-treat the sprouts starting mid-May on 3 to 4 week rotations for the rest of the summer. If kept treated, the last treatment is usually needed in mid-September. A double check the next May almost always confirms that that vine is now dead.
    5) Use of a "brush killer" herbicide at the maximum concentration indicated by the label for "spot treatment" is needed. Weaker herbicides such as glyphosate are unlikely to permanently eradicate the poison ivy.
    6) Another way poison ivy seems to spread in raparian areas is when flooding events occur. If you have a neighbor up the water shed with uncontrolled poison ivy, and a heavy seed load, a flood event can bring seed into your woods sitting in the flood plane. This can turn poison ivy into a "community project". Your neighbors may be highly allergic to the poison ivy oil, have physical limitations, or simply lack the necessary knowledge or tools. Nobody really seems to like poison ivy, and striking up a friendly conversation with your neighbor may help limit the risk of flood plan re-emergence?
    7) In the North Eastern US I was taught at a young age when I'd gotten poison ivy exposure to look for "jewl weed" in the nearyby woods. Co-incidently jewl weed and poison ivy seem to favor the same / similar habitat, so it was usually close at hand. Crushing the leaves and stems of jewl weed on the exposed skin seemed to be an effective first-aid treatment, especially when washing at home wasn't an immediate option. Following jewl weed first aid with a strong grease removing soap like Fels-Naptha almost always proved effective, or at least limited rashes to a few minor easily treated spots. Unfortunately, I've not seen jewl weed growing in most parts of the mid-west or in states like Colorado that still have poison ivy.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 2 месяца назад +1

      And wash the dog after it has been walking through the poisen ivy on the ground.

  • @libbywish7123
    @libbywish7123 Год назад +24

    Thank you for teaching people this and especially telling people not to burn it.

    • @ekimpp
      @ekimpp Год назад +2

      I did. Wish I knew… I almost died from it!

    • @ironrose888
      @ironrose888 Год назад +1

      I have heard that burning it and inhaling the fumes can be extremely dangerous

    • @fastsetinthewest
      @fastsetinthewest Год назад

      I burned mine. No problem.

    • @yungcash8800
      @yungcash8800 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@ekimpp🫣

  • @stevenr6033
    @stevenr6033 3 года назад +20

    I’m so thankful I’m not allergic to it. I’ve got terribly dry skin and eczema, but at least no poison ivy allergy.

  • @build-fabricate-maintain3915
    @build-fabricate-maintain3915 Год назад +7

    When I worked on the space shuttle, we used a barrier cream to avoid dangerous chemicals. I too have had bad experience with Poison Ivy on my 110 acres, but I remembered barrier cream. It dries quickly, and is not very expensive. Ghost glove is one name brand, and there are others

  • @kimt1054
    @kimt1054 Год назад +24

    Here's a horror storry for you folks. Backs in the late 60's, when I was around 4-6 yrs old and my brother was 8-10 yrs old, were both covered with a poison ivy rash from head to toe. My uncle happened to come for a visit one day and saw our rashes. He told my dad to pour gasoline on our arms and legs in order to get cure us from it. My dad told him that wasn't a good idea, but before my dad could react my uncle grabbed the gasoline can, that dad had sitting close by to use for the lawn mower, and poured it all over my brother and I. We both started screaming because it burned so bad, especially the areas where we had scratched the worse. Dad grabbed the water hose and sprayed us down really good. We took a bath as soon as mom could heat enough water on the stove to fill up the large container that we used to take baths in at our rental house. I will never forget how furious my dad was with his brother and how heartbroken he was for us. Thank goodness that dad built us a nice updated house not too long after that.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +9

      Holy smokes! THAT’S a horror story for sure! 😳

    • @mschroed99
      @mschroed99 Год назад +3

      A real uncle from hell.

    • @udavidism
      @udavidism Год назад +1

      My father was a big believer in a very strong bleach solution, almost half bleach and half water. It really burned and I think it might have helped but it didn't need to be that strong.

    • @kimt1054
      @kimt1054 Год назад

      @@mschroed99 yep.

    • @kimt1054
      @kimt1054 Год назад +1

      @@udavidism my grandmother would also use a strong bleach solution. She would also use it before going blackberry picking.

  • @veronicak4938
    @veronicak4938 Год назад +16

    Very informative, thank you! As an anecdote, when I was little I would have such an extreme reaction to poison ivy that my legs and feet would be completely covered on a regular basis in the summer. As an adult, I can’t remember the last reaction I’ve had- and I’ve definitely made contact.

  • @Leonidimus59
    @Leonidimus59 Год назад +32

    Good info. One note - instead of a chainsaw I use a sawzall with a 9" pruning blade. Way easier to clean than a chainsaw, plus you can throw the blade away. Also might be a good idea to spray herbicide on the fresh cut.

    • @johngalt97
      @johngalt97 Год назад +3

      Pruning blades can be savage in their function. Use proper precaution!

    • @BS.-.-
      @BS.-.- Год назад +8

      You dont need to clean the chainsaw. You cut the vine with the top of the blade, throwing the chips out away from the saw then just cut some firewood.

    • @bp-ob8ic
      @bp-ob8ic Год назад +2

      I generally use lopping shears. Little, if any spray, and my hands are nowhere near the vine.

    • @courtneyricherson2728
      @courtneyricherson2728 Год назад +2

      Why would you throw away a whole pruning blade after light use?

    • @papakernz
      @papakernz 9 месяцев назад

      I just use an old shitty bow saw and a pair of rubber gloves. I leave the saw outside and only use it for poison ivy or when I wear gloves. Works great.

  • @angelakaye8906
    @angelakaye8906 Год назад +5

    I am weirded out that you popped up today because just yesterday I was out pulling blood trees and sticktights (beggars lice} and came up on a vine that caught my attention and thought that I should leave it alone but didn't know for sure if it was poison ivy or oak so I took a picture then sent it to my sister to get her thoughts, she is in Idaho now, I am in Texas but she didn't know either. Now I know!! I have learned so much from this video.
    When I was in the 4th grade, my cousin said" "here, let's rub this all over us and we won't have to go to school", so I did. She did not break out at all, I on the other hand was covered and after 2 trips to hospital and more than a week out of school I never told, but since then I get it so easy. I found that putting rubbing alchohol on it dries it up and it goes away a lot quicker than calamine lotion or any other thing on the market. Thanks for sharing and sorry this is so long, I hope you don't mind!! Have a great day!

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +1

      Hi Angela. I appreciate your kind comments and story. Be safe! -Ed

  • @adriankap2978
    @adriankap2978 10 месяцев назад +3

    My husband has gotten it a couple times bc our pup would roam then sit between my husband feet while he fished. He wiped the skin with Clearisil acne pads, it’s an aspirin based solution. Let it absorb for 15mins then apply calamine lotion 2x - 3x/day depending on severity. It’s gone in 24-48hrs or until it’s dried up. You can also squeeze the pad liquid on the area or anyway you like so long as it’s wet then air dried to absorb. I have those pads in our travel first aid kit for any scratches or minor cuts. Heals very quickly.

  • @santosakowski9846
    @santosakowski9846 Год назад +21

    My mother told me she became more susceptible to poison ivy when she aged, and I am slightly more susceptible, too. I think it is probably because when you are younger your skin is more oily and therefore offers greater protection to any adverse effects. People are also more prone to sunburn when they age, partly due to having less melanin and also due to less oily skin.

    • @mnp870
      @mnp870 Год назад

      Also as you age, your skin gets thinner.

  • @ISCARSman
    @ISCARSman Год назад +22

    Great video!! I am currently in my 4th week of a bad reaction. Gearing up to eradicate the poison ivy and this video is quite informative! Thanks!

  • @rtreee1
    @rtreee1 Год назад +4

    Thanks - that was helpful. Here in NW Arkansas, it is all over the place. Last year, I actually donned elbow-high gloves and pulled a bunch out by the roots. The vine and the gloves went into the trash.

  • @lcee6592
    @lcee6592 Год назад +5

    Great video on the nasty ivy!
    I use a bow-saw for the larger vines, doesn’t throw the chips/oil all over the place and lopping shears for the smaller vines.

  • @joefish4466
    @joefish4466 11 месяцев назад +6

    Poison ivy has vines that are widely distributed and cutting the thick vine on tree does not get rid of the surrounding vines. Poison ivy is extremely resilient and will grow back from the remaining vines given the right conditions, but can also come from distributed seeds.

  • @douglasgloff5391
    @douglasgloff5391 4 года назад +9

    I like do do it in the winter time when the leaves are off the vine and dormant. I usually use loppers to cut smaller stuff and a machete to cut the bigger stuff. I always spray around the tree and fines to kill anything on the ground as well to help prevent a new vine forming.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +2

      I agree that it's a little safer in the Winter. I do love watching the leaves die though. Such a feeling of victory, haha! I find that it often takes several treatments when spraying the ground cover. How about you? Do you have a favorite product? Thanks so much for your comment and for watching!

    • @douglasgloff5391
      @douglasgloff5391 4 года назад

      My Cluttered Garage I buy the large bottles and mix it myself using a battery sprayer. I find one treatment in spring then follow up in summer

    • @douglasgloff5391
      @douglasgloff5391 4 года назад

      My Cluttered Garage I get it from tractor supply

    • @yvonnejenkins1262
      @yvonnejenkins1262 2 месяца назад

      ​@@MyClutteredGarage😮 16:59 16:59 16:59

  • @Patriot_Lady1776
    @Patriot_Lady1776 Год назад +20

    Oh man, I've tried ALL the wrong ways to try and abate poison ivy. I've had some of the worst cases of poison Ivy rashes and poison oak rashes you could imagine. Thanks for this education and reminding me to always look out for it!

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +2

      Good luck! Thank you. -Ed

    • @heted1
      @heted1 Год назад +3

      Great video. I never have been sure of what poison ivy looks like until now.

    • @20greeneyes20
      @20greeneyes20 Год назад +2

      After being exposed to poison ivy I wash my hands with alcohol. It cuts though the oils
      I used to get it so bad as the years went on. Not so bad. Thank the Lord. But wash areas with alcohol. 😉

    • @robertagannon442
      @robertagannon442 Год назад

      @@20greeneyes20Thank you, I’ll try that next time.

    • @nisamvise1724
      @nisamvise1724 9 месяцев назад

      When you had the bad cases did you go to the hospital or no?

  • @richardalexander7089
    @richardalexander7089 Год назад +3

    The sound byte used when you kicked the cut vine brought me back to some old and wonderful memories. Props to you and anyone else who recognize it. Classic!

    • @krehbein
      @krehbein Год назад

      Six million dollar man?

  • @freecycling6687
    @freecycling6687 2 года назад +11

    Another option is to cut the thicker vines with an old-style hand saw. Wear an N95 mask, because I've seen the fine dust from the saw take to the air. Rinse the saw thoroughly when done!

    • @countrysister700
      @countrysister700 Год назад +3

      Thank you! That cloud of sawdust made my skin crawl

  • @karenvartan3508
    @karenvartan3508 Год назад +15

    Thanks so much for the video. You might consider doing a video on "recognizing poison ivy in fall and winter" since it looks very different than in summer. One autumn a friend's husband picked ropes of the vine and decorated their house - mantle and staircase - with it because of its gorgeous colors.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +3

      Oh no! Thanks for the comments. -Ed

    • @sig6056
      @sig6056 Год назад +1

      I made vine wreaths out of it once.

    • @marshahall3059
      @marshahall3059 Год назад

      Oh my gosh! I'm laughing but how awful. We have big "ropes" of another plant, perhaps Virginia creeper that are fun to play with. We took once took a visiting aunt and uncle in their 80s to a great park and my aunt hung upside down from one. She was wearing a skirt as usual! I warn people off the vines that look hairy!

  • @krehbein
    @krehbein Год назад +6

    The herbicide you want to use is called CCO or Clover Chickweed and Oxalis killer. Active ingredient is triclopyr. Sometimes they sell the same thing, but labeled just for poison ivy. Same active ingredient. Reminds me that I need to spot spray my backyard so the dogs don’t bring the oils in 😢

    • @markisokawa2067
      @markisokawa2067 10 месяцев назад

      Where can you get it? Do they sell at tractor supply?

  • @joebob7344
    @joebob7344 Год назад +5

    Cutting a large vine , it can regrow and reconnect to the original growth. That is why you need to cut out at least 12 inches. I cut out only one inch and when I came back a year later had reconnected and the vine was even bigger.

  • @robertgehret7615
    @robertgehret7615 4 года назад +12

    Great info! I’ve just moved from California where we have poison oak to SE Oklahoma where it’s poison ivy. I’ve been lucky that I didn’t get poison oak rashes and so far none from poison ivy. You made a very good point about the dogs.....I hunted with my dogs and first thing when I got home was bathing them so the kids wouldn’t get rashes. Been going around my property with a machete cutting the ivy from the trees, lots of work!

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +2

      Robert Gehret thank you for watching, and I appreciate your comments! The machete is a great idea. Just cover yourself from splatter and clean that blade afterward! Thank you!

  • @wa13601
    @wa13601 Год назад +2

    Thank you, ED, for the clear instructions and excellent demo. I also like your calm voice and clear enunciation - some folks talk too fast & don't give enough details. Will look for more of your videos on other subjects!

  • @glee21012
    @glee21012 Год назад +2

    Dog walks thorough the PI, brings it home LOL.

  • @thomasjefferson8629
    @thomasjefferson8629 Год назад +7

    A tip for using a chainsaw on stuff like this... Using the bottom side of the bar throws chips at you. Using the top side throws them away from you.

  • @bp-ob8ic
    @bp-ob8ic Год назад +7

    Great video. Thanks for doing this. I am highly reactive, and am always looking for new information.
    I clip out a section of the vine like you demonstrated, and it seems to reduce the ground cover over time. I have found most herbicides to be ineffective.
    When you wash your clothes, put about a teaspoon of Dawn dishwashing soap in the load to help dissolve the oils.
    When I see it in my garden, I pull it out by the root (using the proper PPE, of course). A lot of times I will stick my arm inside a grocery bag, grab the base, and pull. once it is out, I peel the bag off the same way you did the gloves, with the vine and root inside.
    If I have been exposed, I wash my hands and arms to the elbows (after I've removed my shirt) in the kitchen sink using Dawn. It may be folk-lore, but I start with cold water to keep the pores from opening up and absorbing the oils. Then I take a shower, again using Dawn before anything else.

    • @JD-lv8ql
      @JD-lv8ql Год назад +3

      I must say I've fought this stuff for 50 years on my farm and woods in NC. I made a mistake in my younger days of days of cutting down three old apple trees during the winter. Not recognizing that the dead vines growing around the tree trunks were dormant poison ivy vines. From my waist down, through my pants, I had sprayed the vines sap via the saw blade action on to both pant legs. I looked like I had leprosy on both legs by that night. P.I. sap is no joke! Great tutorial on how to kill it safely.

  • @shaunfeathers9638
    @shaunfeathers9638 Год назад +2

    Yeah your video just educated me on my recent exposure to what I have been allergic to all my life. Been handling those same small trees after having to cut them down without gloves, and now I know from your video to start protecting myself and to start cutting those veins in advance as you have shown in your video. Thanks for sharing

  • @donnaanderson2
    @donnaanderson2 Год назад +3

    Thanks alot, I learned some new things I didnt know. Never occurred to me about pets. Appreciate the new info and insight into how big the vines could be, even to mimic a live tree.

  • @mrphotomanseattle
    @mrphotomanseattle Год назад +5

    I'm fortunate. Poison Ivy has no effect on me. As a kid, I would pull the vines off the trees and never had an issue. As an adult, I would earn extra money clearing poison Ivy patches for a friend's landscaping company.

  • @pamelakate560
    @pamelakate560 Год назад +7

    WOW! Your experiences have been the OPPOSITE of Mine! First, the p. ivy in my yard Does spread by the roots, just an inch or two underground. Maybe you haven't had that type of spreading because you are dealing with large roots above ground. Try looking Under the dirt, I'm sure you will find roots going across the area. Second, I got the rash on my hand and wrist. 2nd and third nights, I woke with my shirt raised a bit and my wrist was on the bare skin. The Rash did spread! It also kept spreading in a larger and larger area of my hand and wrist. I had no control over it at night. I then Wrapped my arm and hand well, and put a patch on my belly. Then the rash began to go away because I could no longer touch it/ spread it.

    • @sporilight
      @sporilight Год назад +1

      I believe in that case, usually it's because 1) you still had the oils on your skin at that point (and by touching more areas the oil is able to spread and cause a reaction elsewhere), 2) you had the oils on your skin there before it completely washed off with multiple washings over multiple days (and was able to affect a wider area by getting smudged in a wider margin), or 3) the time it takes a poison ivy rash to appear can vary (even within a few hours to 2 days later) so it will always look worse in the first few days regardless if you were lucky enough to completely wash off the oils initially. The oils can even stay under your fingernails (if they are long enough) and get spread through scratching if it's not washed off well with a degreaser asap. I am certainly reactive to it and had it a few weeks ago (not my first time), so I feel you! 🥲
      TLDR: The oils spread the rash, the rash is the result of the contact of the oils at some point in time (but it's hard to tell when the exposure occurred exactly).

    • @debcrider
      @debcrider Год назад

      Clean your skin with full strength Pine-Sol right away and then take a shower. It's a degreaser that pulls these oils out of your skin. Wash all clothing especially shoes and shoe laces or wear rubber boots that you can clean with pine-sol.

  • @philsergent1913
    @philsergent1913 10 месяцев назад +1

    Best video and information on Poison Ivy I’ve seen to date. Saved and Downloaded it as well as printed several screen caps. Thank you for your posting. I’ll be sharing it.

  • @deniseandros7082
    @deniseandros7082 Год назад +1

    Beautiful, powerful and greatly appreciated. Be blessed!

  • @javabean215
    @javabean215 3 года назад +13

    I started itching just from watching this!

  • @tammykriskie2233
    @tammykriskie2233 Год назад +3

    Ive always been alergic to poison ivy, oak and sumac.
    When i was a kid i would get it so bad my eyes would swell shut.
    It was awful and now that im older i still get it just as bad.
    I have it growing in my one flower bed.
    And behind my house.
    I Always wear gloves outside just in case and try my best to AVOID IT.
    Thank You for a great video.
    I live in Pennsylvania...

  • @grampandrich7486
    @grampandrich7486 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the info. Excellent job.

  • @neilklokkenga3015
    @neilklokkenga3015 Год назад

    Thank you very much!! Very informative!! Walked in woods all my life,and grabbed those p.i. vines!! All's well!! Just subscribed!! Will be watching!!

  • @HomeWithTheBuffingtons
    @HomeWithTheBuffingtons 3 года назад +2

    I have been watching your videos from the beginning. I am glad I found this one as I never have been near poison ivy and now I know what to look for once we are moved into the new house.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  3 года назад

      Glad to help. Thanks so much for watching. Happy mew year! -Ed

  • @lesamess5685
    @lesamess5685 2 года назад +3

    This has been informative and interesting. Thank you!

  • @nunyabusiness863
    @nunyabusiness863 Год назад +1

    Thanks for this. Thumbs up for the content and the Lee majors/ Lindsay wagner shot! 🤣

  • @James-fs4rn
    @James-fs4rn 11 месяцев назад +1

    👍 good stuff. thanks for sharing. I got some free firewood in the dark one time to learn it had the big hairy vines in the light. Boy did I regret that😂. Had a T-shirt on too.

  • @ahalfkorean
    @ahalfkorean Год назад +4

    Great video! I grew up on a farm, and suffered from poison ivy rashes all-year round. Every remedy worked once or twice, but then failed after. Oddly enough, after going to Korea to visit family when I was 21, my reactions to poison ivy greatly decreased, but I also suddenly became lactose intolerant, haha! Yes, unrelated, but that's just my twisted fate with milk and poison ivy. My Korean mother never had an issue with poison ivy until she was about 40. She could pull poison ivy with her bare hands and never get a rash. Then one day, the urushiol oil stained my mother's skin black where it leaped onto her wrist. From that day, she now has very, very mild reactions, but blisters nonetheless.

  • @dellaburns7307
    @dellaburns7307 Год назад +4

    I have a tree in my yard. Just covered in p I I used your process and by the end of the day every leaf was wilted and with in 2 weeks you can decently see that it was on its way out

  • @VA-in-AR
    @VA-in-AR Год назад +1

    Thanks for safety and prepping tips !!

  • @achillesheal2021
    @achillesheal2021 2 года назад +1

    Obviously ..........a very nice, gentle, caring and knowledgeable man! Highly recommended.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  2 года назад

      Thank you for your kind comments. Much appreciated. -Ed

    • @achillesheal2021
      @achillesheal2021 2 года назад +1

      You are totally welcome! Have a great 4th.

  • @RCAFpolarexpress
    @RCAFpolarexpress 4 года назад +2

    Good evening Ed 👍 Thank you for your great learning input 👍😉 Great drone view and piloting skill Sir 👍😊 Have a great week Sir Cheers 👍

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +1

      RCAFpolarexpress thank you Dave! I’m so happy that warm weather is finally here. Have a great week too, my friend!

    • @RCAFpolarexpress
      @RCAFpolarexpress 4 года назад +1

      @@MyClutteredGarage 👍😉

  • @michaelhudgins6121
    @michaelhudgins6121 3 месяца назад +4

    1) Cut in winter. 2) Use loppers or anything besides a chainsaw imo. Slinging shavings all over you is not good.

  • @MickleCreationsTheHotSpot
    @MickleCreationsTheHotSpot 3 года назад +2

    Enjoyed the videos. Lots of good info

  • @dianneholt6671
    @dianneholt6671 10 месяцев назад +1

    easy to understand, practical, caring, learned a lot. it's very different than bottersweet which grow back after pruning.👍

  • @sartorst3376
    @sartorst3376 Год назад +7

    I've had people tell me they weren't allergic to it but they have never spent time in the woods. I have been around it and not gotten it and I have had it bad.
    I know one thing for sure I have seen times when tiny little resin droplets were present and if it was hot and you're sweating and get it on your skin you could feel it stinging immediately

  • @thecampondroctonhill2113
    @thecampondroctonhill2113 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the info. I was never susceptible to poison ivy until I was over fifty. Now that I’m over sixty I get it bad. I live on a farm… it’s around. I’m using your advice.

  • @jasondavis9784
    @jasondavis9784 Год назад +2

    Wow, incredibly informative. Thank you

  • @junepoineau6438
    @junepoineau6438 Год назад +2

    Great video!! I am always battling poison ivy and i never realized that it can be all the leaves in the top of a tree! Next time I
    cut one of those big vines ill check it out thank you

  • @peacefieldfarm_mn
    @peacefieldfarm_mn 4 года назад +8

    Wow, Ed, great video on a timely topic. Although I have not seen poison ivy here at Peacefield Farm, (MN) I know it is in other locations I have visited in the state. We do, however, have Buckthorn, which is an invasive species that we have been battling with forever. Not poisonous but, the thorns puncture even tough clothes and make you bleed. The larger trees have huge bunches of berries which the birds eat, so it spreads like Poison Ivy does. Maybe you could do a video on your drone sometime! Thanks for posting! Cheers!

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +3

      Thanks so very much! I once planted bamboo which turned out to be a huge mistake. I realized it after just two seasons but it took me about 4 years to eliminate it! Thank goodness bamboo isn’t poisonous! Great idea about a drone video. I hope your spring/summer is going well! -Ed

    • @robertagannon442
      @robertagannon442 Год назад

      @@MyClutteredGaragewe have black bamboo and it has not spread at all. It’s been on our property for about three years now.

  • @mdk2066
    @mdk2066 2 года назад +5

    Enjoyed the vid. If you cut with the top of the bar, the saw will throw the chips away from you.

  • @chrisvan9430
    @chrisvan9430 Год назад +2

    Nice, I didn't expect the bionic man sound effects 😂

  • @johnfitzpatrick3416
    @johnfitzpatrick3416 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the info, I have a couple of white pines it’s strangling.

  • @angelasoucy3268
    @angelasoucy3268 Год назад +3

    Great video 👍 Stuff I wish I knew years ago!

  • @ladyketurahinwaiting
    @ladyketurahinwaiting Год назад +3

    Keeping the battery on the charger weakens the battery’s ability to hold and maintain a charge. That is also true for reachable flashlights.

  • @ednolan5754
    @ednolan5754 Месяц назад +1

    Great video! Great information but I didn’t feel like I had to pause and take notes. The tip on the DJI Was awesome. A great format and presentation!

  • @RCAFpolarexpress
    @RCAFpolarexpress 4 года назад +2

    Good morning ED🌞 Congrats on your 208 subs, you already their in little less than 2 months 👍 Trust me you going to rise your channel faster than you may think have a great week Cheers 👍🌞

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  4 года назад +1

      RCAFpolarexpress you’re too kind, Dave! I’m just trying to keep up with you! 😂 Seriously, thanks so very much for your support.

    • @RCAFpolarexpress
      @RCAFpolarexpress 4 года назад +1

      @@MyClutteredGarage Ed you already pass me 😊🌞👍

  • @EdBacon
    @EdBacon Год назад +3

    I often scrub up using a mechanics soap like GoJo, great at cutting grease and oil

  • @andygates4214
    @andygates4214 Год назад +4

    Hello there. As for the batteries, Lithium batteries do not like to be stored at 100% .....50-60% is perfect. Perhaps DJI knows this and is doing a great service to all of us who just charge it and forget it.
    Love the content.

  • @Princetafari
    @Princetafari Год назад +1

    Excellent channel. I just star my first section of my yard today.

  • @hafsalinda
    @hafsalinda Год назад +2

    Tecknu for the rash already established. Dawn power wash or clothes washing detergent thats grease fighting for initial exposure. Always cold water, always blott dry.

  • @jeffarcher400
    @jeffarcher400 Год назад +3

    A strong forked stick will snap most vines and the tough ones I spin like cotton candy and rip out. Sometimes you even get the roots.
    Long sticks keep it far away and let you reach up high.
    No more carrying tools and worrying about poisonous oils in my pack.

  • @donutman3089
    @donutman3089 3 года назад +6

    As the dog goes walking right on through it....

  • @wilmaroy
    @wilmaroy Год назад +1

    Wilma from 17:16 Louisiana, that was very informative. Very professionally done. Thx🍃

  • @kl5090
    @kl5090 11 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent video. Great content and presentation. Thanks!

  • @allisonsweeney7938
    @allisonsweeney7938 Год назад +4

    Thanks for the advice! My husband is severely allergic so I'm left to deal with the mess! I don't really react to it and we have some trees with those vines growing up them! The one tree is absolutely dead because of it unfortunately it'll have to come down 😶

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +2

      Be careful. Another great help is to get a disposable tyvek suite online or at home improvement store. Thanks for watching.

    • @allisonsweeney7938
      @allisonsweeney7938 Год назад +2

      Wonderful idea! Thank you! ❤️

  • @nathanhale7444
    @nathanhale7444 Год назад +3

    I had a big hairy vine of it growing up a tree. I wouldn't go near it so I used my 12 ga shotgun and destroyed about an 8 inch section starting at ground level. It's been 2 years and it hasn't come back. The stuff I have is resistant to weed killers including one specifically made for poison ivy. I've heard vinegar kills it but I sprayed the leaves with gasoline and it killed the smaller plants. I'll try the vinegar next time.

  • @georgeannavinciguerra
    @georgeannavinciguerra Год назад +1

    I have a pine tree and poison ivy growing up it
    Your video was very helpful

  • @angelareed6539
    @angelareed6539 Год назад +1

    Very informative and well put together video! Thank you!

  • @michelemcneill3652
    @michelemcneill3652 Год назад +8

    I am overwhelmed with the amount of poison ivy on my property this year 😞

  • @M_Ladd
    @M_Ladd Год назад +11

    I had a real bad case of poison ivy one time.Found that swimming in the ocean was a cure for me. That seemed to have always dried it out and gotten rid of it.

  • @nurseratched5537
    @nurseratched5537 Год назад +2

    I loved the bionic man sound effects

  • @marlenewilliamson4005
    @marlenewilliamson4005 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for this . Just bought 108 acre farm in western PA and have been taking lot of walks to mark my Maple trees for running tap lines . The poison Ivy is bad in some spots but not in others . I never had a problem but my Dad did . he always told me to act like I get it because when you do each time will be worse . I too am maturing and am careful. Love the drone idea .

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  11 месяцев назад

      Thank you and congrats on the farm! We just bought a 33 acre farm.

  • @johnsonger4613
    @johnsonger4613 Год назад +11

    Two things: First, most of the ground level p-i below the tall tree with the massive vine was NOT from falling seeds. He would have found when he had his gloves on that if he had lifted one of the leaves it would have been attached to many others along a vine. Several vines would be growing outward from a central root system, shooting up the leaves everywhere. The same roots likely sourced the massive tree vine. (Cutting at the root is how I do it... if I can't rip them from the ground. Because it's on my property's perimeter, I rip the vines up from the ground and off of the trees.) Second, I disagree: Somehow, it DOES spread! I have had breakouts in very remote, even very private, places that were several layers of clothing and/or many hand-washes and showers removed from the place of known contact. I have had contact on the back of my wrist only and gotten a breakout on the inside of my elbow. It has touched my right arm and given me a rash on the left. I would swear that something about the process travels through my blood.

    • @nevisstkitts8264
      @nevisstkitts8264 Год назад +8

      The urushiol resin from poison ivy acts just like axle grease, axle grease that is invisible to our eyes. As an experiment, put some visible axle grease somewhere on your clothing or body. Then go about your business without cleaning it off. At the end of the day take a look in the mirror, or better yet, have someone video you close up.
      Soap and water won't work for true axle grease, and it won't work for urushiol. Hand washing and showers are useless. Layers of clothing are futile. Unlike axle grease, Urushiol resin polymerizes on exposure to air about as fast as boiled linseed oil. It slowly turns into a toxic plastic bonded into the cells of whatever tissue it touches. That's why if you totally degrease, heavy duty industrial degrease, every part of your body within 15 minutes of exposure, you won't get poison ivy rash -- not enough time to set and begin curing. All the clothes and tools exposed to poison ivy have to be degreased as well. It can take BLO a really long time to fully cure, months even years, same thing with Urushiol. However, soaking with mineral spirits accelerates BLO, seemingly to hours or days. IMO same thing with urushiol, wash the tools and fabrics with Mineral Spirit and then set out to dry for several days.
      I used to be "immune" to poison ivy when young, but then I became sensitized and got rash pretty bad. During Covid, I started heavy supplementing with vitamin D3, and now I can run the mower set to mulch over a poison ivy patch. I may get a few tiny spots but no more. It may be that when I was young, my job had lots of daily sun exposure much further south and that's why I was resistant to poison ivy. It takes over a year of heavy supplementing to build up vitamin D in the body. I'm far enough north these days, so sunlight alone doesn't generate enough D.

    • @darwinboor1300
      @darwinboor1300 Год назад +2

      If you scratch an affected site, you can put the oil into your blood stream. Secondary eruptions are more likely to occur at sites that rub (ex watch band, waist band, etc.).

    • @jan3718
      @jan3718 Год назад +4

      Good to know Nevis! I saw some time ago on YT I think, where a fellow said it takes about an hour after exposure for the rash to begin, and IF you WIPE IT OFF, NOT WASH IT OFF, you'll remove more if not all of it.😮 I've tried this a bit and it seems to work. Also, I think he used axle grease to demonstrate how wiping is better than washing it off. Yes, it's all around us here and trying to get rid takes a lifetime!

    • @sarahrose1665
      @sarahrose1665 Год назад +2

      My sister declares that she can get it from the wind... The IV's essences carry on the air current...🤷...🙋🌹

    • @jan3718
      @jan3718 Год назад +2

      @@sarahrose1665 It's horrible stuff! I'm allergic to it and probably get it every Spring by gardening. Your poor sister probably gets it from someone burning it. It is carried on the wind by burning but IDK about getting it just from wind blowing. The oil has to be released from the plant somehow. Hope your sister has good detective abilities to solve the problem 😄.

  • @duckco1
    @duckco1 2 года назад +7

    Two things I noticed that stood out. 1. The knife is a excellent knife I've been threw 10 of them threw yrs, I just end up losing them. 2. Your dogs are getting poison ivy on them so if there inside dogs guess what.

    • @pdet1951
      @pdet1951 Год назад +1

      If you pet that dog you may get poison

  • @grifbabe
    @grifbabe Год назад +1

    Thank you for your time and effort in making this possible for us to view I appreciate you ❤❤❤😊🐾🐾🐾🐾❤❤❤handsome man.🏆🏆🏆👑👌🎖🏅🥇♥️

  • @Microphone73
    @Microphone73 3 года назад +2

    Very informative.

  • @Derekmartin20
    @Derekmartin20 2 года назад +3

    I never got it when I was young . Gradually over the years to this point I'm afraid to look at it sideways out the corner of my eye lol. Built my own home in the middle of untouched Forrest clearing trees just got a touch of it last year. But this year using long handle cutter on the huge vines it got me good everywhere . Starting around the waistline then eventually up and down.

    • @e.conboy4286
      @e.conboy4286 2 года назад +2

      Oh man, that’s awful! My dr gave me shots when I had it, desensitization. It really worked! You might want to inquire.

  • @tooksiethomas2224
    @tooksiethomas2224 Год назад +6

    Thanks for this video. Going through the agony associated with poison ivy exposure. Its the worst.

  • @rosilanesnyder3986
    @rosilanesnyder3986 Год назад +1

    Extremely helpful!!! Thank you so much!!!!!

  • @philliplamberth4075
    @philliplamberth4075 Год назад +1

    Thank you this was very helpful. I have it all over a huge oak tree in my yard. I use to cut it off but it or other would grow back. Even in ground are few inch round harry vines. I don't like it at all

  • @paulcampise3050
    @paulcampise3050 Год назад +4

    I watched up to the dog strolling in. Can't help but think how much poison Ives juice the dogs coat will spread around the house and on your couch and bed, yikes.

  • @scotcoon1186
    @scotcoon1186 Год назад +4

    If the wind blew the wrong way, grandma got it.
    I got slapped in the face by branches on the maples at the end of a field for several years mowing and raking hay before realizing the lower branches weren't maple. It never bothered me.

  • @lynneharrison7215
    @lynneharrison7215 Год назад +1

    Thank you! Very useful information 😊👍

  • @teresabrown3305
    @teresabrown3305 Год назад +1

    I love anything on eradicating PI. I got it from my horse once. I had cleaned her feet and where her let leaned against me I got it. I have probably gotten it from my dogs, too. I got it on mly legs from a stack of magazine that my neice and nephew found by a creek and brought to me and put on my lap. I live near a woods at the back of my property and it is an on going battle. I love Round Up.

  • @BillyP55
    @BillyP55 3 года назад +3

    Informative video. The Mavic's batteries should not be stored with a full charge, doing so could damage them. - The batteries have a built in safety feature that discharges the battery when stored with a full charge (I believe >60%). You should really read the battery section of your manual.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  3 года назад +1

      D’oh! I forgot about the manual, LOL. Thanks for watching!

  • @edpietila2026
    @edpietila2026 Год назад +4

    My sensitivity to poison ivy has changed throughout my life. As a kid, I would get it so bad I became a walking blister, with swollen eyes, hands, legs. As I grew older, at one point I lost all sensitivity to it and could pick it with my bare hands and not get any reaction, to the point I (youthfully stupid) even chewed up some leaves just to verify I was no longer allergic. Absolutely no reaction! Years later, I’m now 72, I only get a very mild reaction to it. So it seems to go in cycles for me. I don’t understand why, but it really doesn’t matter, it is what it is.

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад +1

      At this point I’m not even sure about my sensitivity because I’m so hyper aware and always on the lookout. I don’t want to find out 😄

  • @williamhanna5224
    @williamhanna5224 Год назад +1

    Excellent video Great work !

  • @misskitty2133
    @misskitty2133 Год назад +1

    Great info! It just so happens that we’ve got some new shoots coming up around the base of the chimney 16:58 , outside. I did use herbicide on this about 6 years ago & it appears to be in the same place but I can’t know for sure. We also have pretty English ivy so I’m not using an herbicide this time as that’ll kill everything, not just the poison part. Anyway, I enjoyed your video! We live just south of Boston in Massachusetts. I grew up in Newton but lived in Boston my whole life except for a 5 year period when I lived in Gloucester, Massachusetts so I could go to the county college for reduced tuition. I subscribed & look forward to learning more. Til then, best wishes,, Michelle

    • @MyClutteredGarage
      @MyClutteredGarage  Год назад

      Thanks Michelle. We’re in southern NJ but have family north of Boston. Good luck, and thank you! -Ed