Nontoxic
Homemade Roundup Works Just Fine
By DAVE
FISHER/ecoRI.org News staff
I have had
a problem with poison ivy winding its way through my hedgerow for the past 10
or so years. I never really gave it much thought, usually removing it by gloved
hand, but this year the rash-inducing ivy had really taken hold and removing it
by hand seemed like a daunting task.
Most folks
would reach for the Roundup, but knowing that Monsanto is corporate evil
incarnate, and Roundup is merely watered down Agent Orange, I decided to find a
natural solution to my poison ivy problem.
To be
honest, I took the first recipe I could find via Google search for a natural
weed killer and, after reading the comments below said recipe, tweaked the
recipe up.
Here’s my recipe for an all-natural weed and poison ivy
killer that will cost you less than five bucks a gallon to make at home. I
bought four quarts of white vinegar from Ocean State Job Lot for a buck apiece,
and I can attach my squirter directly to the bottles. The amount of salt and
detergent required for the solution can’t cost more than a buck.
What
you’ll need:
1 gallon
white vinegar
1¼ cup salt (I used kosher, but iodized table salt will work just fine)
2-3 tablespoons of dish detergent (I used Seventh Generation, but I’m sure any detergent will work)
1¼ cup salt (I used kosher, but iodized table salt will work just fine)
2-3 tablespoons of dish detergent (I used Seventh Generation, but I’m sure any detergent will work)
The
process: Add the
vinegar and salt to a large pot. Bring the solution up to a low-medium heat,
just enough to dissolve the salt. Add the detergent. Cool the mixture to room
temperature, fill a spray bottle with the mix and go to town on those weeds.
Keep in
mind, this is a spot solution. Spraying it on the weeds in your lawn will
create big dead spots. It is fantastic for the weeds that pop up in the cracks
in the sidewalk, and has really done a number on the poison ivy in my hedgerow.