Did you mix the entire bottle? Into how many oz water? And then how many ounces of that did you use per gal? Why not just blanket spray the entire yard?
Yes, per the label you are to mix the entire contents (1.5 dry oz) at once (because it is a non-homogenous mixture). I chose to mix it in a 1 gallon (128 liq oz) nurse tank. So, per the label, it is 1.5 dry oz per acre and, when placed in a one gallon nurse tank, you would apply 2.9 liq oz of the nurse mixture per 1000ft^2. The reason I did not blanket spray was that I did not have a widespread poa infestation...just some patches here and there. Hope this helps!
The Negate label requires that you mix the entire bottle (1.5oz). That will treat 1 acre. This is one of the problems is see for homeowners using Negate. 1 acre is much larger than the average property. You could always share with a neighbor using a nurse tank How to Use a Nurse Tank in Herbicide Applications ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE--lopQJ8H58w.html
@@thomasturftips1427 I plan on mixing the container in 1 gallon of water, then filling my 4 gallon tank to do my lawn and neighbors. The question is, how much of the mixed nagate should I put into the 4 gallon sprayer?
@@coachjedijason mix the negate, the whole bottle with a gallon of water. That will create your suspended concentrate. Take 3 oz out of the suspension and add it to 1 gallon of water per 1,000 square feet. You can spot spray with it or if you plan on doing a blanket application the 1.5 oz bottle will do a acre. But spray it at 3oz per gallon per 1,000 square feet. Most sprayers spray 1 gal per 1,000 but calibrate your sprayer to be 100% certain. Hope this helps.
1.5oz of product covers 1 acre. When I spot spray with a 1 gallon sprayer, I can cover approximately 250ft^2. Check out my videos on Nurse Tanks and Sprayer Calibration to assist further.