Dig out the root ball with your garden spade to remove the plant entirely from the ground.
How to remove vine roots from siding.
Don t tug at the ivy suckers until they have turned brown and withered an indication the ivy plant is dead.
Wear gloves when you re removing vines.
Doing this will eliminate their main food source and keep anything from coming back.
Dig up the soil around the roots of the vines.
Dig out all of the vine root system.
Remember if you don t kill the roots the ivy suckers will sprout back up and around the siding.
A power washer took off some from the steel siding and didn t hurt the siding but i used a knife to remove it.
There s no easier way to remove vines from siding than to pull them off.
We cut the root of a huge ivy growth on the side of our house.
The suckers are on there like glue and we cannot get them off.
When the vine is completely dead it may be easier to remove causing less damage.
Others may hide pests like spiders.
I ve had ivy growing on stucco and steel siding.
Pressure washing is appropriate only for wood siding when you don t care whether any paint or stain comes off.
It died over the winter and we have been removing the dead vines off the siding.
Then paint some brush killer on the stump following label directions.
When removing ivy pull it very gently off the wall not worrying about the stems that break and stay stuck.
Before you do this make things easier for yourself by cutting the roots and waiting a few weeks for the vines to wilt.
To remove vines from siding you must completely remove the vine.
As i found with my porch over time the roots will harden and be nearly impossible to remove.
Sorry to say i found no easy way.
Ivy virginia creeper vines and other climbing plants not only grip onto surfaces porous or not but on brick and wood they can actually sends little gripping roots into the siding.
Don t leave the dead suckers on the siding for more than two or three weeks.
Remove a chunk of the stem so there s a gap between the stem and stump of the vine.
If you leave the suckers too long they ll rot oxidize and harden.
We can get much of it off but depending on the age of the ivy you could have significant damage done.
The sooner you can clean your brick the better.
At that point they ll be impossible to remove without damaging the siding.