Health Home > First Aid & Safety > Removing poison ivy, oak, or sumac plants

Removing poison ivy, oak, or sumac plants

Healthwise
By Maria G. Essig, MS, ELS

Did you find this helpful?

Be the first to rate!
Not yet rated

Usually people come into contact with poison ivy, oak, or sumac in wooded areas, in parks, or on beaches. If these plants invade your yard or property, you may wish to remove them permanently.

Tips for removing poison ivy, oak, or sumac plants

  • Never burn the plants. When the plant burns, the plant's oil (urushiol) is dispersed into the air on smoke and ash particles. It can cause serious lung irritation and a rash on all body parts exposed to the smoke.
  • Always wear as much protection as possible, such as long pants, long sleeves, boots, and gloves. Vinyl or leather gloves, or cotton gloves covered with disposable plastic gloves, work well. Rubber (latex) gloves offer no protection because urushiol can penetrate rubber.
  • Weed killers (herbicides) will kill the problem plants but will usually kill any other plants in the area as well. But some products, when used sparingly, will kill the poison ivy, oak, or sumac without killing surrounding trees or plants. When using herbicides, you may try:
    • Pulling the poison ivy, oak, or sumac away from surrounding plants.
    • Wiping the foliage with the herbicide.
    • Using a shield on the sprayer to direct the herbicide more specifically.
  • Manual removal can be very difficult because you must remove every part of the plants (leaves, vines, roots), or they will sprout again.

Dispose of the plants according to your local regulations. Do not compost the dead plants. Urushiol breaks down too slowly, and chopping the vines for the compost heap increases exposure to the oil.

Credits

Author Maria G. Essig, MS, ELS
Editor Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA
Associate Editor Pat Truman, MATC
Primary Medical Reviewer William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer H. Michael O'Connor, MD - Emergency Medicine
Last Updated September 25, 2007
Last Updated: 09/25/2007

Health Resources

help

Yahoo! Health Groups

Join the Conversation

Join a Yahoo! Group and discuss with other memebers in the group. Share tips and experiences

See All Yahoo Groups »

Tip of the Day

Provided by: RealAgeNov 5, 2009

Piling your favorite sandwich fixings on the right kind of bread could mean healthier blood pressure. The right choice? One hundred percent whole-grain.

Read More »

View All Tips »