I was looking for such for Poison Ivy just yesterday. Amazon had Bayer (the aspirin company....that also makes my 125 insect killer), had one at a nice price for wood and Ivy...also kills anything it touches...ornamentals or grass.....If it works as good as its insect killer it is a winner.Dang gum thorny locusts are growing faster than the grass. What is your best spray? I need to get them knocked down soon.
Triclopyr works reasonably well for me, if we're talking about things that are only a couple of feet tall.
Last year I deliberately planted Honeysuckle for the Honey Bees. Second year on purchased cuttings and with a dose of Miracle Grow, and a goodly dose of rain, they are sprouting flowers everywhere.That is the best thing I've found to kill the woody stuff. Privet, wisteria, honeysuckle and any hardwoods that sprout back up where I've cleared areas and fence rows.
I assume that you are talking about honey locust with the long thorns.Dang gum thorny locusts are growing faster than the grass. What is your best spray? I need to get them knocked down soon.
That's the type we have around here and I love the aroma when they blossom in late May. Lots of old fence posts around the place that are still solid but I don't think I've ever cut one down that didn't have carpenter ant tunnels in the center.I assume that you are talking about honey locust with the long thorns.
They ruin tractor tires.
Black locust is a valuable wood around here.
Great firewood, fence posts, rails and never rots.
Got lots of it on my place.
Tiny little thorns that don't hurt anything.
Love it in my house heater.
Mowing takes care of black locusts when it is small with no damage to tractor tires.
Classic example of "one man's meat is another's poison". Deer wear paths through food plots on their way to eat honeysuckle.Last year I deliberately planted Honeysuckle for the Honey Bees. Second year on purchased cuttings and with a dose of Miracle Grow, and a goodly dose of rain, they are sprouting flowers everywhere.
Last year I thought I would transition into being a bee keeper in my old age. The Honeysuckle is part of what I started out with a field full of flowers to feed the bees. Well the insects killed the bee hive thing and the Rye Grass killed the field full of flowers but the Honeysuckle is doing nicely.Classic example of "one man's meat is another's poison". Deer wear paths through food plots on their way to eat honeysuckle.
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