Does Vinegar Kill Bindweed?

0  Discussions
> Ask a question

Bindweed Roots Go 5 Metres Deep. Vinegar Stays on the Surface.

Those white trumpet flowers look innocent enough, but bindweed’s brittle roots can extend five metres underground. Vinegar might brown a few leaves while the real plant sits safely out of reach – ready to send up fresh vines within weeks. Beating bindweed requires something that travels the entire root system.

What Actually Kills Bindweed →

Bindweed with trumpet flowers twining around garden plants

Does Vinegar Kill Bindweed?

No. Vinegar can scorch bindweed leaves on contact, but it won’t kill the plant or even slow its spread. Bindweed survives through an extensive underground root network that vinegar simply cannot reach. You’ll burn through bottles of vinegar while the bindweed continues twining through your garden from roots safely underground.

If you’ve tried DIY weed remedies on bindweed and watched it bounce back, you’re not alone. This is one of the most frustrating weeds in British gardens precisely because surface treatments don’t work.

Why Bindweed Defeats Vinegar

Understanding bindweed’s survival strategy explains why vinegar is completely inadequate:

Bindweed root system showing deep white roots

Roots go impossibly deep. Bindweed roots can extend 5 metres or more below the surface. The white, brittle roots store enormous energy reserves that allow the plant to regenerate repeatedly. Vinegar applied to leaves has zero effect on this underground network.

Every fragment regenerates. When you dig bindweed and snap those brittle roots – which happens easily – every fragment left behind becomes a new plant. A 5cm piece of root can regenerate into a full bindweed vine. This is why digging often makes infestations worse, and why surface treatments achieve nothing.

Vinegar is contact-only. The acetic acid in vinegar damages plant tissue it directly touches, but it doesn’t travel through the plant’s vascular system. It burns leaves while roots remain completely unaffected.

Spraying vinegar on bindweed leaves

Twining habit complicates treatment. Bindweed wraps itself around desirable plants, making targeted treatment difficult. Spray vinegar on bindweed and you’ll likely damage the plants it’s climbing too.

What Actually Happens

Here’s the typical experience with vinegar on bindweed:

Day 1-3: Sprayed leaves show browning and wilting. The visible damage looks promising.

Week 1-2: Affected foliage dies back. You might think you’ve made progress.

Week 3-4: Fresh vines emerge from the soil – sometimes in the same spot, sometimes metres away where the root network has spread. The bindweed is completely unaffected.

Month 2: The infestation is as bad as ever, possibly worse. Underground roots have continued spreading throughout your treatment attempts.

Comparing DIY Methods for Bindweed

Other household remedies fare no better against bindweed’s deep root system:

Vinegar: Burns leaves, roots unaffected, plant regenerates within weeks. Complete failure.

Salt: Can’t penetrate to deep roots, poisons soil for years. You get lasting damage without killing the bindweed.

Bleach: Surface damage only, environmental concerns, likely damages plants the bindweed is climbing. Still doesn’t reach roots.

Boiling water: Cools before reaching deep roots, impractical for spreading vines. The safest failure option but still completely ineffective.

No contact-only treatment can control bindweed. The root system is simply too deep and too extensive.

What Actually Works on Bindweed

Bindweed smothering garden plants

To eliminate bindweed, you need systemic herbicide treatment that travels from leaves down to the entire root network.

Systemic herbicide approach. Allow bindweed to grow until it has plenty of leaf area – the more leaves, the more herbicide gets absorbed. Spray thoroughly with glyphosate concentrate. The herbicide is absorbed through leaves and transported throughout the root system, killing it from within.

Persistence is essential. Bindweed rarely dies from a single treatment. Expect to respray any regrowth several times over the growing season. Each treatment weakens the root system further until it’s exhausted.

Unwinding from other plants. Where bindweed has climbed through plants you want to keep, carefully unwind the vines and lay them on the ground or on newspaper before spraying. This protects your plants while still treating the bindweed.

Timing matters. Treat bindweed when it’s actively growing (late spring through autumn) and ideally when it’s flowering – this is when the plant is transporting most energy to its roots, carrying herbicide with it.

A persistent treatment programme over a full season can eliminate even established bindweed infestations.

Stop Chasing Vines, Start Killing Roots

Systemic treatment that travels from leaves to the deepest roots. Combined with persistence, it’s the only way to actually beat bindweed.

Get Bindweed Under Control

About the author 

Chelsey

Hey there, I am founder and editor in chief here at Good Grow. I guess I've always known I was going to be a gardener. I'm on a mission to share my UK based weed control & lawn care tips with you all. If you have any queries please post in the comments below.


{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

Related Posts

Does Boiling Water Kill Docks?

Does Bleach Kill Docks?

Does Salt Kill Docks?

Does Vinegar Kill Docks?

Does Boiling Water Kill Ground Elder?

Does Bleach Kill Ground Elder?

>
0