English Ivy (Hedera helix) is highly invasive and is all over Lansdowne. Sure it may look pretty on the ground or climbing up a wall, but it will wrap itself around your trees and suffocate them.
English Ivy (Hedera helix) is highly invasive and is all over Lansdowne. Sure it may look pretty on the ground or climbing up a wall, but it will wrap itself around your trees and suffocate them.
As trees lose their leaves, fall is a great time to get out and see just how many trees are covered in English Ivy. This is also a great time to save as many trees as we can -- and it’s a great workout!. Left untreated, the English Ivy will climb up to the top of the trees, out all of the branches, and eventually suffocate the tree. Then it will cost you several thousand dollars to have the dead tree removed.
Anyone can save their trees from English Ivy. It’s a fairly simple method, often called “skirting.” It involves cutting the vines in a 2-foot circle (“skirt”) around the entire tree. Cut a skirt at eye level and another at ground level. Once the vines above the cuts dry up on their own (in a year or so), they can be pulled down. Don’t try to pull them off the tree while they are still alive – you can damage the bark and hurt the tree further.
If possible, pull up the roots. But this can be very hard with English ivy. An alternative is to spray a mixture of water, salt and vinegar onto the cut ends of the vines. You may also need to do this at eye level to make sure the vines on the upper part of the tree actually die.
Here is a YouTube video that explains the process: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwfWtl1WayA
It is good to check your trees every month or so to make sure new vines are kept away from the trunk. It’s a lot of work, but if you like English Ivy as a ground cover, then you’ll have to keep trimming it back away from the tree trunks.
Even if your tree is 90% covered, it can still be saved! Lansdowne is a tree town (could that be our next slogan?) but we are losing trees rapidly to English Ivy. Do your part and check the trees on your property. Then get out there and get skirting. Your trees (and your wallet) will thank you!