How To Kill English Ivy Vines With Salt & Duct Tape DIY

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • English ivy is an invasive species...here's an inexpensive DIY life hack to kill it. After dealing with the large patches of English Ivy, I had some large vines to remove. These vines were very thick and deep rooted and needed to be killed instead of pulled up. Here's how I did it with table salt and duct tape. Dead English Ivy makes me happy.
    Web: www.GreenShortz.com
    Twitter: @Green_Shortz
    Please Subscribe to the GreenShortz Family of Channels:
    Main GreenShortz Channel: Short Videos About Easy Ways to Be Green
    / greentommills
    GreenShortz+GreenHouse: Uncovering What Makes a Green House Green
    / @greenshortzgreenhouse498
    GreenShortzDIY: Simple Green How-To Videos
    / @greenshortzdiy

Комментарии • 603

  • @rhythmfield
    @rhythmfield 2 года назад +68

    This is GREAT. And thank you very much for being one of the rare responsible citizens and speaking out against horrific poisons, used every day and everywhere in the world, such as “Roundup”

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  2 года назад +3

      Thank you for watching, Greg.

    • @MrAquinas1
      @MrAquinas1 2 года назад +4

      @@GreenShortzDIY Did you consider drilling a long pilot hole down the center of those branches to insure absorbtion of the salt?

    • @Tonisuperfly
      @Tonisuperfly Год назад

      @@MrAquinas1I think I might add that to the mix

    • @quinnstory4098
      @quinnstory4098 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MrAquinas1that’s a great idea too

    • @brandonwood3442
      @brandonwood3442 11 часов назад

      Stop fear mongering, you coward. Herbicides need to be treated with respect but you are being outright hyperbolic. There is simply no better tool for controlling invasive plants than herbicides, bar none. Invasive plants are more of a danger to the environment than herbicides.

  • @bigmac1371
    @bigmac1371 6 лет назад +157

    Followed your method and it killed all the stumps in about 4 months,i occasionally checked and topped up salt level. I have now dug up the dead roots with minimum effort.
    Thanks a lot for great advice!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +3

      Awesome! Thanks for the update on your english ivy killing success. I'm sure replenishing the salt periodically helped as well. Thanks for the feedback.

    • @soonerbred22
      @soonerbred22 5 лет назад +11

      Happy for you big Mac. These annoying vines from Satan keep growing in my grass, sidewalk, patio and out my ass

    • @MrAquinas1
      @MrAquinas1 3 года назад +10

      @@GreenShortzDIY Another pro gardener endorses your method but recomends drilling a small long hole in the center of the stalk so it absorbs the salt water more efficiently.

    • @rhythmfield
      @rhythmfield 2 года назад

      @@soonerbred22 English Ivy are Satan’s Tentacles for sure

    • @rockyquinn3374
      @rockyquinn3374 2 года назад +3

      Will this spread throughout to the vibes creeping across the grounds as well?

  • @cruisermax
    @cruisermax 5 лет назад +43

    I like this! Another idea, to eliminate the duct tape portion, is just to drill out the center of the ivy, and fill it with salt. A faster way might be to occasionally fill the reservoir with white vinegar.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +3

      Sounds like a good option. Thanks for the suggestion. Thanks for watching.

    • @susanminer1291
      @susanminer1291 5 лет назад +7

      @@GreenShortzDIY I'm going to try this idea, but use 30% vinegar. Hoping it will kill my ivy quicker?

    • @Amyseclecticlife
      @Amyseclecticlife 5 месяцев назад

      Nice

  • @jamalydude
    @jamalydude 6 лет назад +37

    Thank you for all the ivy videos, just bought a new house that has an ivy issue. I battled it and ripped it all up only to miss the mother root lol and now with these tips I can deliver the final solution to the Vines and free the neighborhood from these pests! May my efforts be looked upon with joy and respect!!

  • @user-gw9tu9qf4j
    @user-gw9tu9qf4j 7 лет назад +44

    I used this about six months ago and it worked brilliantly. thanks so much!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад

      Awesome. Glad you had salty success killing your English Ivy vines. Woo hoo! Thanks for your comment.

  • @norbury2496
    @norbury2496 5 лет назад +26

    Followed your method, to the letter & worked perfectly. Took about 4months.. Thank you.. Ivy is deeeed!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад

      Awesome! Thanks for the update! Ivy no mo. Thanks for watching.

  • @rosemaryowens7290
    @rosemaryowens7290 4 месяца назад +3

    I did this late last summer and it worked on English ivy growing way up a huge maple!!!🎉

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  4 месяца назад +1

      Yay! Glad you had success, Rosemary. Thank you for letting me know.

  • @cathyfitzpatrick9384
    @cathyfitzpatrick9384 5 лет назад +19

    I tried your method and I had a great result I will be very grateful something so simple and doesn't endanger any animals So big hugs and thank you again.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +1

      Yay! Glad you did it Cathy. Thanks for letting me know. :-)

  • @jamierussellmowatt
    @jamierussellmowatt 6 лет назад +119

    I liked the part where he killed the ivy with table salt.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад +18

      Jay Russell you should have said “Spoiler Alert,” because you gave away the whole plot. :-) just kidding. Thanks for watching.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +4

      :-) English ivy makes me salty. Thanks for watching.

    • @debgorham14
      @debgorham14 4 года назад +13

      @@GreenShortzDIY I am going to have to try the salt/duct tape method. We have been fighting a losing battle with english ivy for decades and cant go out and manually remove any longer. Its taken over my house, trees and yard. I even tried round up once and ivy laughed.

    • @jub8891
      @jub8891 3 года назад

      that was the best part

    • @kiragodbe5221
      @kiragodbe5221 3 года назад +1

      @Nasreen Ahmed you must have had poison ivy, not English ivy

  • @southernwanderer7912
    @southernwanderer7912 5 лет назад +12

    That's a wonderful idea! I watched a video several years ago that said to use a gallon of white vinegar and a cup of salt, heat until salt dissolves. When cook, add a little dish-washing liquid. Put in a sprayer and spray the leaves of ivy, Creeping Charlie, etc. that you want to get rid of. The dish soap helps it adhere to the leaves. The leaves take in the salt/vinegar, which takes it to the roots, thereby, killing the unwanted plant.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад

      Thanks for the feedback. And the recipe for the spray. :-)

    • @ingridburling8731
      @ingridburling8731 3 года назад +1

      But what is some of this solution gets onto the host tree or plant? Isn't it going to kill that too?

    • @southernwanderer7912
      @southernwanderer7912 3 года назад

      @@ingridburling8731 Just spray the leaves of the plants you want to kill. The leaves will bring the salt and vinegar into the plant's root system and kill it. Just avoid getting it on the leaves of the plants you want to keep. Use a small sprayer if necessary. If the solution touches the bark of a tree while spraying, it won't hurt the tree because it won't penetrate the bark.

  • @juliagarrett3945
    @juliagarrett3945 7 месяцев назад +3

    What a great idea!! I’ve been looking for a way to get rid of trumpet vine without poison. Wonderful, earth friendly solution. Not to mention, I don’t want to be anywhere near Roundup.

  • @angusbremner3610
    @angusbremner3610 Год назад +9

    Good stuff. It may already have been mentioned but an even more environmentally friendly method would be to drill a hole into the top of the stumps and fill with the salt and water - eliminating the use of the tape. Angus

  • @johnsalmond
    @johnsalmond 4 года назад +2

    THANKS for showing us a way that takes more work but doesn't leave behind an even bigger problem for which there will be NO easy chemical fix!!

  • @beckywilliams9703
    @beckywilliams9703 4 года назад +5

    You are my hero! English ivy is the bane of my existence. I am trying this over winter.

  • @patthomas8164
    @patthomas8164 8 лет назад +18

    I like your simple, low impact recommendation, thank you

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад

      Hi Pat...I know it has been a year, but thanks for watching. :-)

  • @shofar-man
    @shofar-man 5 лет назад +10

    I have ivy growing beyond reach up high trees. I am having some success with cutting vines close to the ground bunching the cut ends of the climbers and placing them in pill bottles of salt solution.

  • @ymiinar4014
    @ymiinar4014 5 лет назад +11

    Thanks for presenting a great and safe alternative to chemicals. Vinegar and salt seem to do double duty a lot of the time, and the more who learn, the better for us all!
    I’m going to try this on some other vines growing up into my oak trees. This will include an attempt on Poison Ivy. I’ll report back.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +2

      Excellent. I like the idea of adding vinegar to the mix. Looking forward to your report. Thanks for watching.

    • @LPallandre
      @LPallandre 3 года назад

      Hi, how did it go with the poison ivy?

    • @EZchairchillen
      @EZchairchillen Год назад

      Still waiting on that report back....

    • @alexandrevaliquette3883
      @alexandrevaliquette3883 Месяц назад

      @@EZchairchillen Unfortunately, Ymiinar got killed during an epic fight against his ivy. RIP Ymiinar4014

  • @MACHOO179
    @MACHOO179 6 месяцев назад +2

    I like your honesty when you said you were not sure if it would work, you tried and it worked, and now you have taken away the doubt for other people, I have literally just been asked by an elderly lady in the village where I live to try and get ivy off one of her tree's, hence why I came across your video, and I'm going to use this method as well as the normal way of just cutting 1-foot sections of the root away from the said tree, thanks for your video and I will keep this comment updated in time as to my progress.
    Just one more thing I'm just your average DIY'er 😂

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 месяцев назад +2

      DIYers are never average. We are a cut above. Happy ivy slaying. Thank you for your feedback.

    • @MACHOO179
      @MACHOO179 6 месяцев назад

      @@GreenShortzDIY Thank you. 👍🏻

  • @lynnglidewell7367
    @lynnglidewell7367 5 месяцев назад +4

    Spring is not the time of year to do this. In Spring plants are sending upwards their juices contents. Instead wait till late Summer when that has stopped. Then perform this recommendation. Now it has all Fall when the plant reverses it's cycle and begins drawing downward juices and contents. This will take the salt directly down to the roots.

  • @jerrybennett6034
    @jerrybennett6034 4 месяца назад

    I have been searching for a way to kill vines with minimal-to-no collateral damage. This is PERFECT! Thank you.

  • @ScottHead
    @ScottHead 3 года назад +8

    Do you have to repeat the salt application through the months? Great idea.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  3 года назад +5

      Hi Scott. One treatment took care of these vines. It likely depends on their initial health. :-)

  • @ChadAmI80
    @ChadAmI80 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for this idea. We just bought a house and the previous owner let the ivy get waaay out of control. We saw pics of the house on Google Maps engulfed in vines back in 2013. I believe she had them removed from the house in 2017 when they replaced the roof. As the weather has warmed up in the past few weeks here in Pittsburgh, I started to see the vines creeping towards the house. I cannot wait to get a dry day to get out there and try your technique! I will report back on how it goes in the fall.

  • @edgeofentropy3492
    @edgeofentropy3492 5 месяцев назад +1

    HUGE thumbs up on this!!! I'm definitely trying this on wisteria and virgina creeper.

  • @elizabethwilson9983
    @elizabethwilson9983 2 месяца назад

    Good to see, gives me hope as I’ve just cut ivy back & sprayed it with table salt & vinegar fingers crossed

  • @lorettajoy7275
    @lorettajoy7275 3 года назад +3

    Fantastic, thank you so much! Here i'm dealing with not only English Ivy, but poison ivy (big hairy vines in places as thick as an arm), kudzu, and Virginia Creeper. So now, i be able to go after these with something that I can live with! But they can't, lol.

    • @being_frank_with_you
      @being_frank_with_you 3 года назад +1

      How's it going so far? Is everything dying? We're dying to know.!

  • @trekpac2
    @trekpac2 Год назад

    I found comments from 4 or 5 people saying that they tried it and it worked (ignoring all the comments saying they are going to try it). Thanks.

  • @JanRossi
    @JanRossi 3 года назад +1

    Totally great move. I will find the mother vine and do this. I just got started and I have 3 trees that are overrun. Thank you very much,

  • @cnlbrett
    @cnlbrett 11 месяцев назад +1

    We are in the rainy season in the PNW. I will be doing this in the Spring or dry spells in the winter. My trees have been struggling for over 20 years. POISON IS NOT AN OPTION.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  11 месяцев назад

      I’d love to know how it goes. Thank you for watching.

  • @Gillby47
    @Gillby47 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for this tip.I am in England and half my house is covered in ivy which I love but it is getting too much to control now.My ivy has very thick roots that grow out from tarmac at the bottom of the wall so can't be dug out.The guy who usually cuts back the ivy twice a year has removed it up to Six feet,we are now going to sit back a while and see if it starts to die off.

  • @TishaRicks
    @TishaRicks 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks much. I have to try this method on my tree in my backyard. I will let you know the effectiveness and how long it took. Again thanks. 🤗

  • @keithwhittington1322
    @keithwhittington1322 6 месяцев назад

    I've been fighting it for two years. This is fantastic! Thanks a million.

  • @mattgauck6518
    @mattgauck6518 5 лет назад +10

    SO excited to try this! I recently moved into my first home that I own (!) and we have a lovely pine tree that is choked with English Ivy, and struggling to survive. The largest root near the base of the tree is about the circumference of my head in size, so I'll let you know if the salt works on such a beast of a root system. Do you have any tricks or tips for removing the recently-severed ivy in the canopy of the tree? thanks so much!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +4

      Yeah! Slay the beast! :-) I do have a video about removing the higher vines. It does involve waiting a while to allow the vines to loosen their grip on the tree. Let me know how it goes. Thanks for watching.

    • @KingdomUploader
      @KingdomUploader 2 года назад +1

      Ours are huge as well; how did you fare with yours? Thanks!

  • @torvous
    @torvous 7 лет назад +5

    Thank you for this! I'd been pouring vinegar and salt at the roots, but the larger vines are pernicious, so I'm going to try this next!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад

      +torvous excellent! Let me know your results. Thanks for watching.

  • @scottthomson700
    @scottthomson700 6 лет назад +71

    Drill holes down into the shoots and fill.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад +12

      Yes. That would to kill the English ivy as well. No tape to clean up. Thanks for the suggestion.

    • @harvbegal6868
      @harvbegal6868 6 лет назад +2

      I'm gonna try this. The vines I'm dealing with have tiny little hair like tendrils or roots and the duct tape wont hold the water.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад +5

      Let me know how Scott's idea works for you. Thanks for watching.

    • @harvbegal6868
      @harvbegal6868 6 лет назад +2

      GreenShortz DIY thanks for the informative video on getting rid of Ivy. I just salt and watered the drilled holes. Will let you know in a few months.

    • @Millmannl
      @Millmannl 5 лет назад +1

      @@harvbegal6868 Did it work?

  • @annausta4246
    @annausta4246 Год назад

    Oh I’ll definitely try this one. We’ve got so much ivy growing and taking over the trees, I couldn’t find a way to get rid of it. Thanks a lot for sharing. 😊

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  Год назад

      Thank you for watching. Happy vine destroying. :-)

  • @4Dermish
    @4Dermish 2 года назад +1

    You had me at Duct Tape. I'll be trying this. Thanks.

  • @Katydidit
    @Katydidit 4 года назад +2

    I am going to try that with some invasive vines in my veggie beds. I have been digging them out for 20 years!!

  • @gailpape2927
    @gailpape2927 3 года назад

    Thank you! Trying to get rid of thick roots and vines. Will try this today!

  • @amandaburney7531
    @amandaburney7531 5 лет назад +1

    Glad to find the salt killed the ivy,i wear gloves and have long sleeves on but the Ivy still gets my wrists every time so i have had a few rashes from the ivy.Must remember to wash my hands and arms next time to prevent the rash occuring as its so itchy.I will put barrier cream on before cutting back ivy next time as i read this will help.

  • @wendeed4233
    @wendeed4233 4 года назад

    I planned to go out and pull the ivy off of our chimney today and do something to stop it. I found your video and did as you instructed. Thank you so much!

  • @132airsoft
    @132airsoft 3 года назад +4

    We've been struggling with English ivy for years and it's driving me nuts. I'm glad that I saw your video and would definitely give it a try. I am pretty sure it's going to work for me because I remember the good old days that I could get potassium nitrate from hardware stores to kill tree stumps.

    • @SeanGonzalezMDHEXT
      @SeanGonzalezMDHEXT 3 года назад

      So, did it work?

    • @132airsoft
      @132airsoft 3 года назад

      @@SeanGonzalezMDHEXT mine aren't thick enough to be effective. There are very tiny ones that are hard to get rid of

    • @SeanGonzalezMDHEXT
      @SeanGonzalezMDHEXT 3 года назад

      Oof

  • @barbarajeanbraceletlady3090
    @barbarajeanbraceletlady3090 3 года назад

    I’m so happy for this video. I don’t like using chemicals, and this is a much better way to be rid of the vines climbing my shrubs.

  • @guardianofthesacredflame1649
    @guardianofthesacredflame1649 4 года назад +1

    Table salt is a cool trick. I have duct tape in the garage and salt in the cabinet. I might also put a copper nail in the center of the ivy stock or drill a small hole in the center a get some copper refrigerator tube and slip that into the center to aid in the killing processes.

  • @2sassy324you
    @2sassy324you 2 месяца назад

    Thanks so much the vines around my house are horrible going to definitely do this!! Gotta go get some lopers and some duct tape totally!!!!

  • @B30pt87
    @B30pt87 Год назад

    OMG, Thank You! I am dealing with Ivy crawling everywhere - also trees that look just like that one. I am so happy! I wouldn't use Roundup either, but I hacked some of the thickest vines off at the ground, and it was a LOT of work.
    (I subscribed.)

  • @HeyPlannerGurlHey
    @HeyPlannerGurlHey 4 года назад

    Thanks shorts so excited to try this we have 2-3 30+ year old ivy trunks around our property. We keep trying to cut it down but this will work!!!

  • @Edmondo51
    @Edmondo51 4 года назад

    Wow!! It looks very good, I am going to do it and soon I will let you how it goes. Thank you very much

  • @phillipsargeant7311
    @phillipsargeant7311 3 года назад +3

    I was super excited when I found this video since we have a bad ivy problem in our yard. I'm sad to say though, this didn't work, even though it seems to have worked for others in the comments here. I applied the duct tape and salt in Aug 2020. It's now Dec 2020 and there's new green foliage growing on all the stalks. Some of my thoughts and observations:
    - I might have Irish Ivy, does this method only work on English Ivy?
    - It was challenging to get a perfect seal with the duct tape given the storks had many tendrils sticking out from them, do you need to have a perfect seal to make it work?
    - The Ivy root system goes under the fence into the neighbors yard where it continues to grow, do you need to be able to use this method on all storks in the root system, or at least a majority?
    - Is there a higher % of iodine in table salt in America compared to Australia (I'm assuming it's the iodine that kills the plant)?
    Any insights from anyone would be appreciated. I definitely don't want to start using chemicals just yet.

  • @OneWildTurkey
    @OneWildTurkey 3 месяца назад

    I know a lot of people don't like it and some really hate it, but I use glyphosate or triclopyr. But I don't spray it, I use a paint brush and dilute it much stronger than when used in a sprayer.
    I hadn't thought about using duct tape, though. That's a great idea! Thanks!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  3 месяца назад +1

      I’ve used the paint brush method with stubborn hard-to-kill invasives. Thanks for sharing.

  • @slairdandraful
    @slairdandraful 7 лет назад +4

    Thank you, I have loads coming in from an overgrown neighbours garden, absolute pain. I didn't t want to use chemicals.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад +1

      +Sandra Laird since this is your neighbor's ivy, you might want to use the patch removal method using a lawn mower. I've got a video on that too. The salt method will kill it across the property line. Thanks for watching.

    • @johnstarkie9948
      @johnstarkie9948 4 года назад

      Salt is a chemical.

    • @takisoundbruzer9821
      @takisoundbruzer9821 3 года назад

      Water is a chemical.

  • @LulzNZ
    @LulzNZ 6 лет назад +5

    Love your work! Any thing to keep chemicals out of the environment. I want to get rid of convolvulus without using chemicals - I wonder if this method will work.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад +1

      Ahhh...the ever present Morning Glory. I'm dealing with that too. I think you'd need to make a liquid spray for that, versus a direct application of salt. Google "vinegar salt water ratio for killing weeds." That ought to get you something that will work, but still be organic. Thanks for watching.

    • @johnstarkie9948
      @johnstarkie9948 4 года назад

      Salt is a chemical!

  • @kaceybongarzone4977
    @kaceybongarzone4977 3 года назад

    Yay! Thank you for a natural way to save the tree. I am going to try this next week.

  • @kelpkelp5252
    @kelpkelp5252 Месяц назад

    Great! Can this also work for thick brambles?

  • @alfredcalleja450
    @alfredcalleja450 10 месяцев назад

    You are a LEGEND! Thanks, I've got this problem, and this should fix it. Thanks again!

  • @andreaharris6632
    @andreaharris6632 5 лет назад

    Thanks for the video. I just read about salt, vinegar & also dish soap working to kill these wretched vines. I will be trying this out this weekend. I think I will try using vinegar instead of water though in hopes that it will work quicker.

  • @KingJorman
    @KingJorman Год назад

    thanks for the demo. another video said it is safer for the plant environment to use epsom salts, that sodium chloride in the ground makes it so nothing can grow there.

  • @randy8897
    @randy8897 2 года назад

    thanks for the info ,i'm going to try this method as i have a fish pond near by

  • @desmondehoppie4758
    @desmondehoppie4758 2 года назад

    Wonderful. Thank You for taking the time to make this video.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  2 года назад

      You’re welcome. Thank you for watching.

  • @vanessasgram8
    @vanessasgram8 4 года назад

    What a great tip. We used to use Roundup but I like to keep that for impossible areas that nothing works on only. SO this is great--I tried a vinegar soak but that didn't work well at all! Salt it is! from now on! THANK YOU AGAIN for this tip.

  • @AlirioSilva
    @AlirioSilva 8 лет назад +7

    Thanks for sharing! Love that there are alternatives to Roundup and other kinds of poison. Going green is the way!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  8 лет назад

      Yeessss! Behold the power of salt! Makes food tastier and kills English ivy...and that is tasty too. Thanks for watching.

  • @Alex-oq5uf
    @Alex-oq5uf Год назад +1

    This is the first time ive seen an alternative to conventional herbicide for treating cut stumps. I'm mostly commenting to add my little bit of interaction so that the video is more likely to come up for other people. Going to try it on my oriental bittersweet, though.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  Год назад

      Thank you for the comment. I'd love to know if it works on the bittersweet. Thanks for watching.

  • @ZojieRainePlays
    @ZojieRainePlays Год назад +1

    Thank you! Gonna use this on the massive ones trying to kill my trees.

  • @mattchowbeach
    @mattchowbeach 3 года назад +2

    Hi, l like very much your style and the way you're always looking for green method. Just wanted to bring a little point that many people seem not to be aware of. Table salt often (or always?) contains additives like ferrocyanure. I think it's an anti-agglomerate. Any way, sorry for my poor English, I'm a Quebecker. I would use coarse salt maybe it doesn't contain that stuff. By

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  3 года назад

      Thank you for the input, Joe. And for the encouragement. Thank you for watching.

  • @theresashepherd2604
    @theresashepherd2604 5 лет назад

    Cannot wait to try this method!! Without using poison this will be great. Thank you for sharing.

  • @susanbraddy2277
    @susanbraddy2277 6 лет назад

    That sounds very good and green. Will be giving it a go today and will also be interested in the time it takes. Will let you know thanks.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад

      Thanks Susan. I'd love to know the timeline. :-) Thanks for watching.

  •  7 лет назад +3

    Great idea. Do you have to keep the brine reservoir topped up for those months, or is it just a single application and you leave it to dry off in its own time? Cheers

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад +5

      +Tomás Dietz in this case, just one application wears enough. These were pretty thick vines though, so I think one salting ought to do it. Thanks for watching.

  • @loubino18
    @loubino18 7 лет назад

    Thx for the clear concise green video. My challenge is my Locus tree's bark has grown around the vines from the base to 12 ft up; I can use a ladder and get to individual vines but will I hurt the tree using salt since they appear to have grown together? Tree's about 25 yrs old, has been showing signs of distress compared to similar trees (less leaves, large branches fallen, etc.).
    THx in advance, appreciate your help!

  • @gingertankersley2997
    @gingertankersley2997 4 года назад

    I'm really excited that Greenshortz has a solution for my English ivy problem. I'm pulling up lots from around my trees and landscaping. I will find the roots and will take them out with salt and that ever helpful tool, duct tape!

  • @rainbowbeard38
    @rainbowbeard38 4 года назад +1

    I've wanted to kill the ivy at the end of the garden for 10 years. Now I've seen the proof of table salt. Big thank you to green shortz

  • @itzabella100
    @itzabella100 3 года назад

    Thanks for this info......definitely going to try this....

  • @curtdorman9213
    @curtdorman9213 2 года назад

    I am going to try this. love it! I am an environmental science teacher and we always look for green solutions.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  2 года назад

      Awesome. Thank you for teaching kids about our amazing planet. Thank you for watching.

  • @charlieglendinning2372
    @charlieglendinning2372 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for this. I was about to buy Roundup. One thing I will probably do different is to replace the water with white vinegar. Seems to me it would "electrify" the action of the salt more powerfully... we'll see.

    • @KingdomUploader
      @KingdomUploader 2 года назад

      did the salt with vinegar work even better? quicker? Thanks

  • @deborahcrow2045
    @deborahcrow2045 6 лет назад

    thanks for the tip as I have a LOT of it around here so I will begin the process and let you know how it does and length of time

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад

      Awesome, Deborah! I love to know you results. Happy ivy slaying! :-)

  • @gybx4094
    @gybx4094 4 года назад

    Sometimes Roundup and other herbicides don't even work over the long term and it's very expensive. This is a proven cost-effective method. I'll try it.

  • @mygoldfishrocks
    @mygoldfishrocks 5 лет назад +1

    So yesterday I cut the bottoms off little zip lock bags that I had (from Hobby Lobby, they're like $2 for about 200 or 300 of them). Then I slipped the bottoms onto the cut tops of two types of unwanted plants - the first is Brazilian Pepper Trees, and the second is unidentified vines that have pretty much taken over our wall of bushes in our backyard (and choked out the bushes so much that many have died off). I then taped and sealed the bottoms of the bags onto the plant with duct tape. I filled the bags about 3/4 is the way (I tried to cover the top cut part of the plant). Then I squirted a little white vinegar just enough to saturate the salt, and zipped the bags shut. We'll see what happens. Your video was the inspiration. 👍

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  5 лет назад

      I love it. Let me know how it goes. Thanks for watching.

  • @tfrank1326
    @tfrank1326 7 лет назад +1

    I have some english ivy I planted almost 10 years ago that would never grow where I wanted it. I let it die out. Now, in the past 3 or 4 years, it is coming up on the other side of my yard (not from neighbors, this is street side) about 30 feet or so from where it was planted. I keep cutting it back but it keeps going under the fence and climbing all up in my forsythia shrub! Going to try something like this but they are all tiny little vines at the moment, not the big thick limbs like you had on the tree. thinking of trying to dig and find the main root, cut it, apply salt to it (maybe with duck tape like you did and wrapping with a plastic bag so it stays in contact since not upright). I sure hope this works. SO tired of constantly cutting back this ivy. I'll never plant it again, even in a pot! :)

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад +4

      T...I suggest pulling up as much of the English Ivy as you can by hand first. Try this after a day of rain when the ground is soft. Once you get to the salting, I think your plastic bag method could work nicely. Gather a bunch of vines, trim the ends all at once so they are even, add salt and water to a plastic grocery bag or ziplock and secure with duct tape or a rubber band. Let me know how this goes.

  • @nedscrivner9893
    @nedscrivner9893 7 лет назад

    super glad to find this, I had been told that you could spray a salt solution on ivy and have the same effect? but I have 1/3-1/2 of a acre of ivy to get rid of and that would be to consuming, I did how ever cut the vines chocking my big trees last year and of course they are growing back, NOW I KNOW WHAT TO DO ABOUT THAT!! awesome

  • @TheChosford
    @TheChosford Год назад

    That's crazy! Thank you! I''m going to try this.

  • @Sara-bd9vb
    @Sara-bd9vb 6 лет назад +6

    This is great. I’m going to try this on Himalayan blackberry bushes before they eat my children

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  6 лет назад +1

      Hi Sara. Blackberry vines sometimes have a soft pithy core. You may be able to cut the vine and use a nail to hollow out the core a little and just funnel the salt in. It would let you skip the duct tape step. I'm guessing there are lots of little vines. Yes? Or is this a different type of plant? Thanks for watching.

    • @Sara-bd9vb
      @Sara-bd9vb 6 лет назад +2

      I'm in the pacific northwest, the himalayans have taken over many of our native plants here, including our native black cap berries (which grow on a delicate, thin vine). In regards to the himalayans, there aren't many little vines here, some have a diameter of 3 inches. In order to remove them, I have to first cut them down in sections and then pull out all roots or they grow back at an alarming rate, sometimes an inch per day. It's very hard work and it takes persistence, no amount of money is worth the use of roundup. I will come back with my results, any ideas would be much appreciated. thanks again

    • @JC-dt6ul
      @JC-dt6ul 4 года назад

      Did it work? I'm in Seattle and need to tackle quite a few on our property.

  • @jillwherry2172
    @jillwherry2172 4 года назад +1

    Just what I needed! I'm super excited to try!

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  4 года назад

      Happy ivy hunting, Jill. Thanks for watching.

  • @BestHeelInBusiness
    @BestHeelInBusiness 4 года назад

    Hey im from uk great video. Would I have same results if I mixed a salt water solution and sprayed weeds and ivy 🤔

  • @garyleidecker1993
    @garyleidecker1993 3 года назад

    Wow a fantastic non toxic solution!!!! Thank you!!!

  • @karenllata4808
    @karenllata4808 3 года назад +8

    Great suggestion! I'll give this a try. Love that you are considering the water source nearby. Too bad there is no way to control others from using RU. Should be banned for use by homeowners.

  • @maerieariel4376
    @maerieariel4376 7 лет назад

    Genius. I'm going to do this. What an elegant solution.

  • @manoharmenghani6149
    @manoharmenghani6149 7 лет назад

    I have it on blockwall between us neighbors. I have cut it down with loppers etc about 2 years back but they have again grown back that at some place is about a foot deep. I have thought of taking a circular saw, bring the flat surface below blade height & then slide it along 60 ft wall. Do it at the height of every 1 ft.

  • @50hellkat2
    @50hellkat2 Год назад

    I used salt on a stump drilling holes and pouring salt into them. Probably could have added water but did not know to. I do not know how long it took but there was no regrowth from the stump and it eventually just came out it decomposed chunks.

  • @raekc4839
    @raekc4839 4 года назад

    Sounds like a Great method! Wondering if adding vinegar in top with the salt would make it more lethal? I use vinegar, salt, dish detergent for general weed killer. I will definitely try this! My boxwoods, privet hedge and dogwood are covered with this horrible English ivy.

  • @briah9120
    @briah9120 3 года назад

    Will this work similarly on a Trumpet Vine that has taken over my back yard and neighbour? Was going to try Triclopyr, but if this more natural way works, i'm all in. Thanks

    • @sassytheclassy_rose9778
      @sassytheclassy_rose9778 3 года назад

      I'm sure it will. In biblical times they would defeat people and spread salt so those people could not use the land. Salt is meant to kill the crops but it won't hurt the water

  • @positivevibes4105
    @positivevibes4105 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for the incredible information and Brilliant tactic.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 месяцев назад

      Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching.

  • @anetazykova
    @anetazykova 2 года назад

    Thank you for your video. It really helped. I love it.

  • @MarsieInTX
    @MarsieInTX 3 года назад +1

    I have what looks like tie vine running rampant through my yard. I've named it Hydra. No matter how much I pull it out and cut it back, it continues to spread and pop up further and further into my yard and veggie garden. Since these vines are much smaller than the ivy, I think putting the vines in a bucket of salt might be easier. Hope it works. 🤞

    • @rockyquinn3374
      @rockyquinn3374 2 года назад

      Interesting! What happened

    • @MarsieInTX
      @MarsieInTX 2 года назад

      @@rockyquinn3374 It sort of worked... The vine died, but it either didn't eradicate it completely, or it already spread so much that I'm probably dealing with hundreds of shoots. It came back in the spring, worse than ever.

  • @stevechance150
    @stevechance150 4 года назад +1

    Is there any risk to the tree by using this salt method on the attached vine?

  • @shadybrooksheep278
    @shadybrooksheep278 Месяц назад

    How many acres can you do this to? 35 of My sheep can clear an acre in 10 days. You still need to cut vines on the trees but at least they are accessible.

  • @ro31369
    @ro31369 4 года назад +1

    I'd be curious about about the impact that it had on the tree's biome. He's says otherwise, but pure salt is pure table salt. Oh, and I do lots of E-Ivy hackin'.

  • @Jubes26
    @Jubes26 8 лет назад +3

    My upper vines took 2months to die then able to pull. The base, I'll try and get back to ya. Got lots of this around here.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  8 лет назад +1

      +Jubes26 Ha! Yes. The english ivy certainly makes itself at home. Good luck with the fight! Thanks for watching.

  • @mikekennedy4572
    @mikekennedy4572 Год назад

    Thanks for this tip. I am currently trying to eradicate decades old ivy that was allowed to grow and spread totally unchecked. It is a real mess with stalks that have literally become as tall as trees, no exaggeration. I will be trying your method, although I will drill the larger, wider sections. Thanks.

  • @slairdandraful
    @slairdandraful 7 лет назад

    Great advice thanks I already use salt on weeds. This ivy started a tiny patch on his fence and is now invading my garden. I ve used hedge trimmers on it each time I do the hedges. I will try rid my garden of it. Thanks again....love your channel.

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  7 лет назад

      +Sandra Laird thanks Sandra. Good luck on your English Ivy battle.

  • @somegenerichandle
    @somegenerichandle 2 года назад

    I'm going to try this. I'm sensitive to MSG, so I really don't want to expose myself to roundup.

  • @amendippanesar
    @amendippanesar 8 лет назад

    This is brilliant Tom this is going to help in my garden

    • @GreenShortzDIY
      @GreenShortzDIY  8 лет назад

      +Amen Panesar Thanks Amen. It's time to get that garden planted. I just uploaded a how to video on building a raised bed. It is pretty simple...something you could do with your kids in a couple hours.

  • @alcg3981
    @alcg3981 7 месяцев назад

    I would have liked to see you pull those out of the ground. In my experience, the thick (6-8") roots still live on about a foot underground!