I would NEVER be without one. They are incredibly effective. There are many different sizes. Get the right one to reduce your work. I assume you are thinking of hand held? I have a 12-inch for cleanup work and a double headed 24-inch for plot work. Use a 1:1 mix of gly and water. If you are man enough to swing one, it will do everything you want it to do. I guess wicking was more popular when Roundup was $190 a gallon, but, still, being able to play a height differential is butt-kicking awesome!Speaking of which, I have some johnson grass in pastures I am going to take care of and would prefer a wicking bar. How efficient are they? Waste chemical? Or, work pretty well.
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cleth does it for me, kills the grasses... but leaves the rest. Currently debating spraying with gly at a light rate in hopes of knocking back non grass enemies such as PA smartweed.
We have several Durana plots that are getting run over with Johnson grass, crab grass and other grass we don't know the names of . Clethodim or wicking bar for the best solution? Thanks. D Hunter.
I would NEVER be without one. They are incredibly effective. There are many different sizes. Get the right one to reduce your work. I assume you are thinking of hand held? I have a 12-inch for cleanup work and a double headed 24-inch for plot work. Use a 1:1 mix of gly and water. If you are man enough to swing one, it will do everything you want it to do. I guess wicking was more popular when Roundup was $190 a gallon, but, still, being able to play a height differential is butt-kicking awesome!
The only drawback I can see is coverage width. Still, I'm a big fan of rope wick applicators.Dan,
I do not want a hand held one. I have too much ground to cover. I would like one that mounts to a tractor in the front I suppose.
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Dan,
I do not want a hand held one. I have too much ground to cover. I would like one that mounts to a tractor in the front I suppose.
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