How to kill ailanthus (AKA tree of heaven)
13 years ago
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Killing a Empress Tree AKA Royal Paulownia or Princess Tree
Comments (6)I'll just copy what I wrote in a similar thread, and add... GOOD LUCK!! I've told this story several times- I had two ancient Paulownia tomentosas removed from the front yard of our new house in May of '07- before we even moved in. I felt terrible that our new neighbor's first impressions of us were as tree killers, but it simply had to be done! As much as I hate killing a tree, I am not a criminal. The criminal is the IDIOT THAT PLANTED the damned things. I had the roots ground out as deep as the largest grinder would go. The roots shoots that came up that year were horrendous- one every foot covering the entire yard. It was literally a daily chore to keep up with them- you'd cut them all then the next morning there would be another hundred of them 2 inches tall. They came up again equally as bad in '08, all spring and summer. In '09 they slowed down a bit on my property but began seeking new areas as I saw them in neighbor yards as well- not only on the adjoining properties but across the street. Spring and summer of '10- three full years since I had the trees taken out- and I still got shoots. THREE YEARS! They slowed down considerably but I still had to cut down one or two every couple of days. They are impossible to pull. They are one tenacious tree. AND... I cut more root shoots in the spring of '11!!! Four. Full. Years. After the trees were removed. This tree is the devil!!! This is the very first year I have not seen one- five full years of diligently patrolling the yard with scissors to cut root shoots. In a way you're gotta respect that degree of the will to live!...See MoreAilanthus altissima - Tree of Hell
Comments (2)I feel for you. I don't know how it ever got the name of "tree of heaven." I've spent the last month pulling dozens of young seedlings from my garden. There aren't any other ailanthus on my 3/4 acre lot but they're in the neighborhood....along the road. My feathered friends are responsible for "planting" them here I'm sure. I feed them in winter and keep fresh water in 2 bird baths for them and look how they repay me;) As I understand from others who have tried to remove larger trees, the trunk should be cut, bruised and painted with Round-Up or Garlon. But I have no personal experience. I would suggest that you take this question over to the native plant forum here for more experienced advice. A gardenweb search will likely turn up some threads from other flustered ailanthus haters. Good luck to you. Here is a link that might be useful: Tree from HELL!...See MoreKilling an Empress Tree AKA Royal Paulownia or Princess
Comments (1)You don't say where you are, but perhaps the Department of Primary Industries in your state might be able to help. There is a WA article here on the dangers of suckering trees "exploding" in reaction to being lopped. I guess the trick would have been to poison the tree first, but its easy to say things in hindsight. You might be advised to call in a professional now, perhaps they can do some cutting or root barriers but otherwise I guess you will just have to keep going with the drillings and injections. I had a problem with a Robinia - and actually native tuckeroo can also be a problem, eventually you will defeat it but makes it difficult to grow other things. Here is a link that might be useful: suckering trees...See MoreKilling stumps with glyphosate
Comments (8)"Be careful with triclopyr, it has the potential to damage adjacent plants (via soil uptake)." Good point. Or if you use enough of the ester form in certain kinds of weather, via vaporization. (or in some cases, even enough of the amine. But it is safer in this regard than the ester) "triclopyr is more effective on woodies than is glyphosate." I don't think as a blanket statement, that's entirely true. It could be partly true. Triclopyr seems to kill faster leading people to believe it's better. It might have a little more penetration power in certain cases but you could certainly overcome that with how you formulate the mix. I have killed large poison ivy vines with _either_ glyphosate, 3 way, OR triclopyr. So depending on the approach you take with the stump/shoots/etc. glyphosate will work just as well and be cheaper on a per unit product basis. For my preferred "cut, drill and fill" method, glyphosate + surfactant always works. For the treatment of Ailanthus, specifically, yes some "academic"/"technical" sources do claim triclopyr is better than glyphosate, but right here we've had people report generic roundup worked for large scale Ailanthus control. If I had one or two Ailanthus, I'd just use glyphosate if that was the cheapest to buy, which it probably is in the required concentration. For a large number, yes I would go with the proven technique of tcp ester in a non-polar carrier. I am almost sure the prevention of suckers has more to do with the technique than the plant killing chemical used. (See other posts Shaxhome and I made: http://forums2.gardenweb.com/discussions/1649416/how-to-kill-ailanthus-aka-tree-of-heaven) Ultimately, it probably is true that both triclopyr and imazapyr have more raw plant killing power than glyphosate, but they also have more attendant risks. Especially the latter. But glyphosate has plenty of activity if you apply it correctly, as Shaxhome's experience showed!...See MoreRelated Professionals
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