Fun thread to watch.
Darn shame I can roll around in the stuff and not get an itch. :tongueup::D
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Fun thread to watch.
Darn shame I can roll around in the stuff and not get an itch. :tongueup::D
Awesome. Thanks for the pic. Where is it sold, usually? Drugstore?
If there's not too many individual vines, cut the base and treat the stump with an undiluted herbicide made for PI.
Me too, ain't it great? I've been know to wade into large heavily grown patches with a brush blade equipped weed eater and have at it. Think splatter everywhere.:lol: How many of you break out just thinking about doing that?
Me too until about age 35. Spent my childhood and young adulthood roaming through the GA/FL/AL and AZ woods, through thick brush, never even knew there was any need to watch for the stuff. All I watched for were venomous snakes, of which there were plenty.
Then after a hike and swim in West Clear Creek AZ, I found out all about the stuff, with a lesson never forgotten. In recent years, after having had it several times, I have done a fine job of avoiding the stuff. I guess I have become pretty expert at spotting it. Discovering the fuzzy vine was a major step forward. Around here, that vine may be your best warning. Small or fat, slightly fuzzy or like a woolly worm, it will go up the side of many trees that I was planing on hanging from, with no leaves of 3 anywhere in sight. But if you look real close at the tree's leaves, often hanging right at face level, there they are. Lot's of leaves of three blended in with the tree leaves, looking just like the tree's leaves at first or even 2nd glance. Look close enough ( but not TOO close! ) and you will be able to trace those leaves back to the vine rather than the tree. And they ( leaves and wooly vine ) are out to get me. But I am probably about 20 years without an out break now, and I routinely hike off trail. The last PI rash was while helping with trail maintenance at my main hiking park after ice storm damage. I did not know about the vines then. I'm so glad I learned about them!
Much tougher to identify is poison Sumac, but I think also much less common.