The biggest challenge of keeping a low maintenance garden or yard is removing and keeping away the weeds. Methods I’ve tried that didn’t work for me are:
– boiling hot water
– herbicides (weed killer only) from big box stores
– salt, vinegar, dish soap, water solution

So I’ve heard about Killzall but waited to try this concentrate because it removes everything including the plants you want. It’s recommended to spray 12-18 inches away from wanted plants and to avoid windy days cause the solution can blow over. I used a bag to cover my plants when spraying around them. A bit risky but I willing to risk it to remove the weeds. I’ll find out if this truly Killzall in about a week and will reapply if needed. One thing I’m excited to see is if this works on bamboo. Would love to know if people have had success using this or any precautions I should’ve considered.
I rarely use the HD5000 but this was a great opportunity to do a job in one go. The 6.5 gallon tank was more than enough and it made it easy for me to move around my property without straining anything.
You can find a 10% discount code for @P@PETRATOOLSn my bio or comment/DM me and I’ll send you a link.

Landscape, diy, front yard, backyard, outdoor care, garden life, home maintenance, dad content, homeowner

#diydadnextdoor #diydadproject #dadlife #contentcreator #killzall

7 Comments

  1. Yeah, I love how you have bare hands while you’re handling all those chemicals… yikes.

  2. LOL when I first saw your video I was screaming Glyphosate then that's exactly what you pulled out. That use to be what Roundup was before they reformulated the consumer version. You can still buy it from DIY Pest Control sites. Your mix already has a surfactant. If it didn't you would want to mix it with a little dish soap or non-ionic surfactant. That will kill all of your weeds next you need to get a pre-emergent herbicide down. The most common one you will see in the big box stores is Preen. Costco typically puts it on sale in the spring. It needs water to activate so try to put it down before a rain or water it in. Here in Phoenix which would apply to most warm climates you put it down in the spring and fall. As others stated you want to wear proper PPE during application. Long sleeve shirt and pants as well as rubber gloves.

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