RobSmith
Banned
We've got this stuff called Zero and another called Roundup .. It's sprayed or wiped onto the leaves. It kills the roots. even if you replant the same day only the chosen grass dies .
Now that thing looks pretty slick!
Here is crabgrass. Most likely derived its name from the "legs" it produces. As one of the pics indicate with my hand in it, it can be lifted like a sod mat. I am now letting my two yards just be crabgrass, it will just be plush green and soft to walk on. No more weed control or fertilizers needed.
Makes 3 gallons. $12.99 Not cheap !
Or does CG have to be in individual "clumps" to be CG ?
Here is crabgrass. Most likely derived its name from the "legs" it produces. As one of the pics indicate with my hand in it, it can be lifted like a sod mat. I am now letting my two yards just be crabgrass, it will just be plush green and soft to walk on. No more weed control or fertilizers needed.
typically yes, I believe. Crabgrass is typically clumps and grows that way. I believe even if an entire yard was made out of crabgrass it would still be in clumps, just a lot of them. But we typically have purple crab grass down here in Texas. There are other types as I understand it.
This is basically what all the crab grass that grows in my yard looks like
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That's Bermuda. I know this since I seeded my front yard (15,000 SqFt) recently with 150lbs of bermuda seed, after it was leveled. I seeded 50lbs, three different times. After the first 50lb seeding, the seed took, but the crabgrass took over. Three workers, 6AM-5PM, and 12 drum liners later, my crabgrass problem was gone.
The Bermuda is getting thicker, and the crabgrass is mostly gone. Now, I walk it every few days, and if I see crabgrass I spray a little round up right in the middle, then pull it a few days later when it yellows.
roc_on_the_rocks - The last picture you posted. I don't think the last picture you posted is crabgrass. I had some of that too, and that is a little harder to pull than the crabgrass was. The crabgrass runners shoot out from the center, but you can gather them easily to pull them up, as you put a hand shovel under the roots for leverage. My front yard was leveled with river silt, so the weeds pulled easy.
.typically yes, I believe. Crabgrass is typically clumps and grows that way. I believe even if an entire yard was made out of crabgrass it would still be in clumps, just a lot of them. But we typically have purple crab grass down here in Texas. There are other types as I understand it.
This is basically what all the crab grass that grows in my yard looks like
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Yes, I would call that crabgrass and at $8/gallon, you can't go wrong !Thanks again for every single input, much appreciated.
So if this is not crabgrass, what the F*@% is this SOB?
Should I still try Spectracide Weed Stop For Lawns Plus Crabgrass Killer?
That's witchgrass.
Bermuda grass is also call couch grass, devil's grass and scutch according to Wikipedia.Well, o.k. I stand corrected. I have Bermuda grass then. It is a shame my Bermuda grass is not golf course grade though, I could set myself up some putting practice greens out front.
It has a relatively coarse-bladed form with numerous cultivars selected for different turf requirements. It is also highly aggressive, crowding out most other grasses and invading other habitats, and has become a hard-to-eradicate weed in some areas (it can be controlled somewhat with Triclopyr, Mesotrione, Fluazifop-p-butyl, and Glyphosate)
Yes, I would call that crabgrass and at $8/gallon, you can't go wrong !
If you haven't had rain in more than 5 days, water it the day before. Also water it the day after. Give it about 3-5 days and hit it again.
You are going to have dead spots that you need to reseed as soon as your peak temps stays below 80. The plants have already dropped their seeds, so a pre-emergent next spring is very important.

That is just quinclorac.
I have been doing an experiment with this
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It is very effective on broadleaf weeds and most crabgrass succumbs after 2 application about 4 days apart. Now I have tried it on yellow nutsedge. Well, after 2 applications 4 days apart and about 10 days, the nutsedge doesn't like (slow growth), but it is not dead yet ! 3rd application today.
Note : I am spot spraying.
FWIW - I like Spectracide for most weeds but the "crabgrass" part of that doesn't seem to work here. It does better if I take the off-the-shelf hose end sprayer concentration and pour that in a gallon jug with a ratio of about 1/2~1 pint to the gallon. I'm trying a hefty application of Weed-B-Gone grabgrass control right now, so we'll see. One yard has the Image on it, the other Weed-B-Gone. It's a race to the death!
Note - I have both Bermuda (preferred) and St. Augustine (came with the house). None of the stuff I use hurts the Bermuda. If the St. A gets hurt, well - too bad.
Water the day before and the day after. I hit them a second time after about 4 days. A few took 3 applications.FWIW - I like Spectracide for most weeds but the "crabgrass" part of that doesn't seem to work here.
Water the day before and the day after. I hit them a second time after about 4 days. A few took 3 applications.
My crabgrass 'carpet' is to extensive to consider pulling by hand. If the Spectracide Weed Stop For Lawns Plus Crabgrass Killer doesn't work, ...
Second application in about 4-5 days.
Do you have an idea of how much to apply? Is a light spray to the crabgrass OK or the entire plant needs a good soak? (I did the latter, just in case, but it gets $$).
