All plants
Parasiticplants
No.
The short answer is yes, It can be mixed. I have used a mix of glyphosphate (Roundup) as well as tryclopyr (included in Crossbow) in blackberry removal. Use standard precautions PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) ect. and soon your Blackberry will be dead.
Too much baking soda can cause a build-up of materials and kill plants.
Yes. Crossbow weed kill goes to the roots and kill.
No, Crossbow weed killer will not kill tulips. The herbicide in question will target woody plants, such as brush, shrubs, thickets and trees. It will not touch edibles or ornamentals, such as flowers, grasses, herbs and vegetables.
Crossbow Herbicide can be bought at Home Depot, Lowes and Tractor Supply stores. It will kill woody shrubs and broadleaf plants but will not affect grasses.
form_title= Crossbow Herbicide form_header= Keep your plants growing healthy with Crossbow herbicide. Have you ever used herbicide before?*= () Yes () No Are you using it to kill weeds or brush?*= () Yes () No What is the square footage of your yard?*= _ [50] Do you have any pets?
NO, Crossbow has no effect on grasses.
Crossbow herbicide is guaranteed to kill all weeds and leave grasses intact. Horse tail or Mares tail is a weed which is susceptible to Crossbow herbicide.
Very small children
yes
You get a crossbow. You don't get the crossbow, the crossbow was taken totally out of the game after the initial trailers were already made.
It's not supposed to, yet it definitely killed my lawn.
VERY small animals, i wouldn't trust it to kill anything over a small squirrel.
These two products are different, and they kill with different mechanisms. RoundUp (glyphosate) kills pretty much all vegetation and Crossbow is a combination of two broadleaf killers, which are ester 2,4,-d and triclopyr. RoundUp may be "stronger" in a sense but if you are targeting particular weeds with the desire to keep the grass around, use Crossbow. One thing to keep in mind is that if you kill everything using RoundUp, you're opening your ground to a whole host of other weeds that will move in as soon as the RoundUp binds with the soil (RoundUp doesn't go away, it just binds very readily with soil and organic particles). Nature abhors a vacuum so in many cases it's better to hit the thistles and woody weeds with the Crossbow and allow grass to take over. Otherwise you can end up with even more thistles and plants you would have never imagined coming in six months later. Crossbow and any other broad-leaf killer works most effectively on actively-growing plants except some respond better when hit in the fall. Same deal with RoundUp. Crossbow may be more likely to make its way through the soil to kill plants you didn't mean to kill. RoundUp stays where you spray it, even after it hits the soil.