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Corn Gluten Application

Spreading corn gluten inhibits the formation of root hairs through which a seedling absorbs water. Without these root hairs, a seed will die before it pushes above the soil. A natural product, corn gluten is what’s left of corn after the sugars and starches have been extracted to make syrup, cornstarch, and other food products. One application of corn gluten can suppress successful germination by 80 percent. A second application 30 days later can increase suppression to 90 percent. That’s on a par with highly toxic postemergents like Roundup. A third application after another 30 days will produce nearly complete suppression.

Comments

And I bet it works great at killing strangler vines (especially poison ivy) without hurting the tree itself...

You've given me some ideas.
Yes that is one thing they say it works well for. Mentioning poison ivy in many of the various articles.

Let me know if your ideas work out. :) I'm planning on trying this in our lawn this year.