What kind of ivy is this?
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ENGLISH IVY
English ivy was my first thought, too. It is very pretty and trainable
I googled "image of poison ivy and poison oak" your picture looks like poison oak. I'm not positive but you might want to Google that to compare...just to be on the safe side
Looks like poison ivy. Leaves of 3 left it be. Or pull it out!
Yeah, I second the poison oak. It is definitely not English ivy
Your picture looks like Poison Oak. To remove it where gloves and protective clothing, and put it in a black bag, DO NOT burn it. Leave a few leaves on the ground and treat with round up to kill the root. Repeat treatment as you see it reappear. Some people are very allergic and others not so much.
Mutant Poison English Ivy from the Planet Zoltar.
I honestly don't know. Looks a bit like both. Perhaps u can show pics to someone at a plant nursery and they can help?
I hadda do a little more research on that one, the leaves on the last picture I posted weren't quite the same. I think it's kudzu
https://www.wikihow.com/Identify-Kudzu
Looks possible to be poison ivy or sumac. I know one has 3 leaves, and the other 4. You local nursery would know. Pull it out from the root with gloves and put it in a clear plastic bag. Take it with you. If you have no luck, go to the local library, you don't need a card just to look at books. Find a few on plants, and see if you can find it that way.
This is not poison oak. if you look closely at the juncture of the three leaves on poison oak (and poison ivy) they don't connect as one larger leaf, They are individual leaves comin off of the main stem. The vine in question has one three lobed leaf coming off of the main stem. I don't think it is anything "poisonous". Also a lot of the poison ivies have a slight sheen to them which I think is the oily substance that actually causes the irritating rash when brushed against your skin. Another tip to try, if you don't want to use any herbicides, and don't have a large "crop" of it, is to boil a pot or kettle of water, pour the boiling water over the newest tender leaves and the stems especially at the starting spot of the plant and soon they will wither, die and kill the entire plant in as little as a day. This was what my great grandmother, grandmother and my mother always did and of course I do it and it always works. Good Luck on identifying it, though.
Also Virginia Creeper and Boston Fig vines are often misidentified as poison ivies. Virginia Creeper looks exactly like poison ivy when it first starts to leaf out with just three leaves but soon sprouts out the other two.
Leaves of three leave them be....i was ways told that lol
Check with your county extension office. They usually have a website and some will let you upload pics for identification.