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What is Fusilade?

Updated: 9/14/2023
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12y ago

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A selective post-emergent herbicide is what Fusilade is.

Specifically, Fusilade is a control of annual and perennial weeds which compete with grass and ornamental plants. It is called post-emergent because it is applied after the weeds appear. It is considered selective because it targets certain weeds such as Bermudagrass.

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What kills Johnson Grass?

Johnsongrass is considered to be a noxious or toxic weed within its immediate environment. Typical herbicides used to control the plant are Roundup Ultra, Accent, Beacon, Poast HC, Assure II, Bugle, Fusilade DX, and Fusion.


What herbicide kills Johnson grass?

Johnsongrass is considered to be a noxious or toxic weed within its immediate environment. Typical herbicides used to control the plant are Roundup Ultra, Accent, Beacon, Poast HC, Assure II, Bugle, Fusilade DX, and Fusion.


How much is a double headed quarter from 1991 with eradicane on one side and fusilade on the other worth?

You have an altered coin worth maybe a dollar as a novelty item. I have one of these coins. It is not an altered coin. It is thicker and larger thana US quarter. Since both names on this coin are names of products by the Syngenta company, I would suspect this is some kind of advertising coin for their products.


What weapons did they use in charge of the light brigade?

That depends. The 600+ British cavalry soldiers that charged the lines carried sabers and light infantry weapons. The Russian lines they charged and died against were armed with infantry weapons and modern (for that time) artillery pieces. The largest caliber weapon the British troops could have carried would have been .753, fired from the 1842 rifled musket, the smallest was .577, fired from the 1853 Enfield Musket. Ammunition would have been expended relatively quickly into their 3/4 mile charge, and reloading would have been extremely difficult at full charge under full artillery fusilade. The Russians, however, were firing nonstop with guns as large as 8 inch, with shells (explosive rounds) and shot (solid projectiles) from 8 inch ball to canister (containing grape--sort of the cannon equivalent to buckshot) and possibly chain or bar shot since naval guns and munitions were the Russians' goal to protect. The links below connect to pictures of similar weapons British cavalry troops would have carried.