[MAIPC] herbicide control of Autumn Olive, Multiflora Rose, and Bush Honeysuckle

Marc Imlay ialm at erols.com
Wed Jun 8 09:38:01 PDT 2022


Only did them out when the soil is very wet so the roots come out completely. Marc

 

From: MAIPC <maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org> On Behalf Of Melody Brown-Carney
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2022 11:19 AM
To: Jackson, David Robert <drj11 at psu.edu>; Wakeford, Anne M <anne.m.wakeford at wv.gov>
Cc: MAIPC Listserve <maipc at lists.maipc.org>
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] herbicide control of Autumn Olive, Multiflora Rose, and Bush Honeysuckle

 

Can you give advice about safely removing fig buttercup from my perennial flower beds? I’ve tried digging them out for the last 5 years and can never get them all out?

 

Thanks

 

Mel


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On Thursday, June 2, 2022, 12:03 PM, Jackson, David Robert <drj11 at psu.edu <mailto:drj11 at psu.edu> > wrote:

Anne,

 

If you want just one herbicide for cut stump and basal bark then I would recommend you use a use a triclopyr ester product (i.e., Garlon 4 Ultra).  Mixed at 20% in a commercially available basal oil and applied as indicated, it is effective on all three species you listed.  Large bush honeysuckle (3 plus inches in diameter) can be a bit challenging to control with basal bark applications, but I have found it to be effective when applied to large honeysuckle stumps.  When stump treating be sure to treat the cut surface as well as the sides of the sup and any exposed roots with this mix.  

 

See our fact sheet on bush honeysuckle:  https://extension.psu.edu/shrub-honeysuckles 

 

Dave

 

David R. Jackson

Forest Resources Educator

Penn State Extension-Centre County

Willowbank Building, Room 322, 420 Holmes Street

Bellefonte, PA 16823

 <mailto:drj11 at psu.edu> drj11 at psu.edu         814-355-4897(office)

Forests and Wildlife Extension:   <https://extension.psu.edu/forests-and-wildlife> https://extension.psu.edu/forests-and-wildlife 

 

“Anything we can’t do forever is by definition unsustainable.”

Sir David Attenborough

 

 

From: MAIPC <maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc-bounces at lists.maipc.org> > On Behalf Of Gover, Art
Sent: Wednesday, June 1, 2022 5:11 PM
To: Wakeford, Anne M <anne.m.wakeford at wv.gov <mailto:anne.m.wakeford at wv.gov> >
Cc: MAIPC Listserve <maipc at lists.maipc.org <mailto:maipc at lists.maipc.org> >
Subject: Re: [MAIPC] herbicide control of Autumn Olive, Multiflora Rose, and Bush Honeysuckle

 

Hi, Anne. 

 

I use the glyphosate:triclopyr mix (3.0 lbs plus 1.5 lbs, acid basis, per acre, respectively) to good effect. The only species I have observed unsatisfactory injury is common buckthorn (glossy is susceptible). If you use it, be certain to follow the mixing guidelines:

- start with 3/4 of the total water

- add the triclopyr, begin agitation

- add the glyphosate only after the triclopyr is mixed, and agitate immediately or constantly.

- I don’t apply the mix at carrier volumes lower than 20 gallons/acre - the two ingredients behave at that concentration, but at higher concentrations (lower carrier volumes) you can start to see precipitate.

 

Plan on a follow-up. You can be very selective with a low volume application with a backpack sprayer, but you will not get the canopy penetration you would with a mistblower, so retreatment is pretty much inevitable.

 

I would push up the window up to September into October. Exotics do hold foliage comparatively late, but waiting into October runs risk of “early” leaf drop or fall color, and therefore reduced effect. I find rose is often defoliated earlier than the other species.

 

I can’t really comment on the training, as I am only familiar with applicator training in PA, which has two levels, Certified Applicator (pass Core and Category exam(s), work autonomously, can directly supervise non-credentialed applicators) or Registered Technician (trained by a Certified Applicator in a 13-point curriculum, can work autonomously, cannot supervise others). If you wish them to work autonomously, be prepared for the class to be pretty involved and hands-on. Backpack spraying is simple in concept, particularly if you can distinguish the species, master the equipment and proper coverage, and deal with the terrain and site conditions. (:

 

Be well.

 

Art Gover

 

 

On Jun 1, 2022, at 12:30, Wakeford, Anne M <anne.m.wakeford at wv.gov <mailto:anne.m.wakeford at wv.gov> > wrote:

 

I'm planning an invasive species removal project in Elkins WV and there are native species mixed in. I  would like your advice.

 

The 3 invasive species I'm looking at are Autumn Olive, Multiflora rose, and Bush honeysuckle.

I'd like to use one herbicide that will work effectively for all 3 species.

 

I'm edging towards the cut stump method.  But would also consider basal bark

 

What is your thought of using a mix of triclopyr and glyphosate as per the Penn State article below? 

 

I'm planning to work with volunteers and first hold a technician training class so they become certified in the use of herbicides. 

 

Any advice you could provide would be greatly appreciated. 

Or if there is anyone else you can recommend that I should contact for advice please provide me with their contact info

 

I'm hoping to have a training class late this summer and start applying in October or November.

 

Please feel free to call or email me.

 

Anne

 

Anne M. Wakeford 

Coordination Biologist

WVDNR/EOC

738 Ward Rd. 

PO Box 67

Elkins, WV 26241

304-637-0245 ext 2035

Anne.M.Wakeford at wv.gov <mailto:Anne.M.Wakeford at wv.gov>  

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