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THANK YOU! These chemical manufacturers don't make it easy to figure how much to use. Your method makes it easy, even for me! Great video, straight to the point and clear and concise!
LMAO Herbicides will not kill quack grass because of the 2 foot rizomes beneath the soil. I know, cause I tried with 53% glycosphate 8oz a gallon. It just laughed at me.
Similarly, I read about someone taping a sponge to a hockey stick. Then they dipped the sponge in roundup and wanded it across the taller quackgrass to selectively "paint" it
Personally I think this looks awful. The 1/4 rule wasn’t followed and if it was I feel it would at least somewhat natural. To me it looks like someone bought their first set of pruners and went crazy, it doesn’t compliment this plant species unless you are planning on training it into a multi trunk tree.
Spreader sticker is usually a non-ionic surfactant or methylated seed oil (MSO). It helps the post emergent herbicide stick to the foliage of the weed so it can be more effective by exposing it for a longer time as opposed to it just running or dripping off after application. I always mix mine with whatever herbicide I'm using.
@@MrErpman I haven't had as good of luck with dish soap as I have with NIS and MSO but I still use it in my lawn for dry spots and also with a soil loosener. When I have company over for a BBQ I'll put down some baby shampoo because it has the same effect as dish soap but it smells really good.
@@APrawks Personally I have been using Petra Tools' surfactant with the fertilizer in it. Seems to work a little faster but the soap has also worked ok for me.
@@HEAVENTWA It will kill what is above ground. Especially not in a single application. I’ve tried it. The only true way to actually kill Quackgrass is to do two treatments a week apart with QuickPro and then till up the soil while also applying QuickPro to the soil the entire time you are tilling…which means you need a second person. But that doesn’t mean that you definitely killed it. You’ve just killed it deep enough that you won’t see it for a few years. Quackgrass is a weed you can really only “manage”. Saying you’ve found ways to eradicate it from a turfgrass lawn is really saying “until next year”….which is the definition of “managing it”.
Wild onion is NATIVE to North America, and yes, it is edible. To eat it, saute it with butter. It's kinda scary that someone will spray toxic pesticides on a lawn to kill something that's edible.
I'm not sure i like the look as much as the rounder shape with leaves all around. I understand, though, what you're saying about air circulation and light. 🤔🤷♀️
Good video, and by spreader sticker i assume you mean surfactant? It is recommended to use a surfactant with quinclorac. A surfactant is a substance that helps to wet and spread the herbicide over the leaves of the weeds. This makes the herbicide more effective and helps to prevent it from being washed away by rain or irrigation. Which one do you recommend, Methylated seed oil (MSO), Non-ionic surfactants or Anionic surfactants? Thanks.
Thank you for this explanation. On the Tenacity label, mix rate for fine fescue and tall fescue are different. Fine fescue requires a lighter application for this turf. As I observe your video, it appears for a tall fescue rate of application. What is the tsp/gal rate for fine fescue? Thank you!
Go push a shopping cart through a zero turn maneuver and watch the wheels.... now go duplicate that on your mower with the levers..... apply reverse pressure to your inside wheel lever during tight turns. You HAVE to keep your wheel moving WITH the turn you are trying to do. A dead wheel equals a dead spot on the turf. Do it at low speeds until you get the feel for it and the feel of your machine. You shouldn't be 3/4 sticking through tight turn maneuvers anyways.... it's not a racetrack, it's dirt covered with foliage! Reversing your inside wheel through zero turning will allow you to turn on a dime with no turf damage. You're NOT turning, YOU'RE TWISTING!