Permit required: No Licensed trade required: No HOA review: N/A
Manual and homeowner-grade herbicide removal of an invasive species on your own property does not require a permit in Litchfield Borough or Litchfield Township. Sale of Oriental bittersweet has been banned in CT since 2004, so removal is encouraged. Follow all product label directions, these are the legally binding use instructions for any herbicide.
This is a multi-year suppression campaign, not a one-season project. Year 1 will deliver significant visible progress. Full root-system mortality on established bittersweet typically takes 2-3 seasons of consistent follow-up. Setting that expectation now prevents frustration when resprouts appear in year two, they will, and that is normal.
Celastrus orbiculatus · 2 zones on property. A woody deciduous vine that girdles and kills host trees by spiraling tight around trunks and blocking sunlight. Once established, cutting alone stimulates resprouting, herbicide is required to injure the root system. Seeds are spread by birds, which is why fence lines and woodland edges are typical colonization points. Sale banned in CT since 2004.
Identification:
Herbicide: Triclopyr, not glyphosate, bittersweet is tolerant of glyphosate. For large established vines, cut-stump method. For young regrowth after cutting, foliar spray in late spring or fall. Product options: Garlon 4 Ultra (professional, most effective), Brush-B-Gon (homeowner formulation containing triclopyr), BioAdvanced Brush Killer Plus.
Bittersweet is best hit in fall because the plant pulls carbohydrates downward before dormancy, carrying triclopyr to the roots where it does the most damage. Spring foliar on bittersweet regrowth (May to June) is also effective because the leaf cuticle is thin and absorbs herbicide readily before it thickens mid-season. Avoid treating in spring before leaves fully emerge, sap flow moves upward in April, actively working against downward herbicide translocation.
Available at Torrington Lowe's or online. One 32 oz triclopyr bottle covers both foliar and stump treatment across 2 zones for year 1.
| Tool | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bypass loppers, 26-30 in | Owned | Essential for cutting bittersweet vines up to ~1 in diameter. Fiskars PowerGear2 or Corona BP 3180D. $35-55. High reuse value across future garden and yard projects. |
| Folding pruning saw | Owned | For bittersweet vines over 1 in diameter. Silky Gomboy or Bahco 396-LAP. $25-40. Low cost, long life, used across every tree and shrub project. |
| Hand pump sprayer, 1 gal | Owned | Listed above in materials. Dedicated herbicide sprayer, do not share with other garden uses. |
| Safety glasses / eye protection | Owned | Required for all herbicide work and brush cutting. $5-12. |
| Tape measure | Owned | For estimating zone areas and herbicide mix volumes. |
| Wheelbarrow | Owned | For moving bagged debris to trash staging area. |
| Item | Low | High |
|---|---|---|
| Triclopyr brush killer (32 oz), covers year 1 foliar + stump | $20 | $35 |
| Hand pump sprayer, dedicated herbicide use | $18 | $30 |
| Bypass loppers, permanent tool, reused on all future projects | $35 | $55 |
| Folding pruning saw, permanent tool | $25 | $40 |
| Supplies (gloves, bags, flags, brushes), replenish each season | $35 | $55 |
| DIY Total, Year 1 | $133 | $215 |
| Professional initial clearing (Litchfield County CT) | $800 | $2,500 |
Invasive removal contractors in Litchfield County typically charge $75-150/hr for a 2-person crew with minimum half-day charges. A heavy multi-zone bittersweet job of this scope commonly runs $800-2,500 for initial clearing, with annual maintenance contracts at $400-900/year. This is firmly DIY territory in both cost and the sustained monitoring commitment.
Cutting bittersweet without treating the stump. Cutting alone stimulates root sprouting, an untreated stump returns stronger than before within one season. Treat every stump; if you run out of herbicide, flag the untreated stumps and return within the week.
Treating in spring before leaves fully emerge. Spring sap flow moves upward, working against downward translocation. Wait until leaves are fully out for foliar, and avoid the spring sap-flow window (April to early May) for cut-stump.
Using glyphosate instead of triclopyr. Bittersweet is notably tolerant of glyphosate; you will see top kill but the root system survives and resprouts vigorously. Check the active ingredient on any product you buy.
Leaving bittersweet fruit on site. Birds eat the berries and reseed your cleared zones within one season. Bag any cut material with ripe or near-ripe berries and dispose in trash, do not compost.
Treating on hot, windy, or rainy days. Heat evaporates herbicide before absorption, wind drifts onto desirable plants, and rain within 24 hours washes product off before translocation. Treat on calm days, 65-85F, no rain forecast for 24 hours; early morning or late afternoon is ideal.
Assuming one season is enough. Established root systems can be 10-20 years old. Quitting after year 1 when resprouts appear is the most common failure mode. Plan for 2-3 seasons of follow-up before declaring a zone clean.
Norway maple and black locust are not in scope for active removal but warrant attention on one front: allelopathic soil chemistry. Both species release compounds that suppress germination and growth of neighboring plants. If you removed roots from garden beds and are seeing spotty germination nearby, allow 1-2 seasons for the compounds to break down. Aggressive composting and amendment of the affected beds will accelerate recovery. Monitor the bittersweet zones for new maple and locust seedlings, they will opportunistically colonize cleared ground and should be pulled while small.