gertman
Well-known member
Hi all I just rented a 27 acre pasture and need to kill blackberry, persimmon, and dogfennel. What do yall suggest for the job.
If you spray directly on the trees it may kill them. Surmount will kill them if you spray the ground under the trees.alabama":3ech9dx3 said:Surmount
If trees you will have to use 2-4D and Remedy. Grazon will kill trees just like surmount.
so on a pature that has locust trees and greenbriars and some blackberries that I am wanting to reclaimdun":3j04fe8s said:If you spray directly on the trees it may kill them. Surmount will kill them if you spray the ground under the trees.alabama":3j04fe8s said:Surmount
If trees you will have to use 2-4D and Remedy. Grazon will kill trees just like surmount.
From my results it would be. If we ever get a couple of dry days I'll be doing it too.Angus Cowman":1uhcjtba said:so on a pature that has locust trees and greenbriars and some blackberries that I am wanting to reclaimdun":1uhcjtba said:If you spray directly on the trees it may kill them. Surmount will kill them if you spray the ground under the trees.alabama":1uhcjtba said:Surmount
If trees you will have to use 2-4D and Remedy. Grazon will kill trees just like surmount.
surmount would be the better option than 2-4D and remedy
kind of extreme and very costly to destroy a whole field when a little spray will do the jobKingfisher":2zxvrygq said:A dozer.........
If I remeber correctly it didn;t do a lot with sapling size walnuts. But they do appear dead now so maybe they just take longerkenny thomas":2h8tsby0 said:Got a couple of gallon of free Velpar that I am going to use first. I had not tried the surmount but will use the velpar on the bad woody places and then buy some surmount. Is there anything it just does not seem to kill very well?
Remember that 2,4-d is very volatile and will spread where you don;t spray it.gertman":3fu5xhe6 said:Thanks for all the help, I'm going with the 2-4D and Remedy, the farm supply has Remedy the cheapest I've seen in a while $69 a gallon.
Angus Cowman":2stt3kfh said:kind of extreme and very costly to destroy a whole field when a little spray will do the jobKingfisher":2stt3kfh said:A dozer.........
plus on locust tress you can doze them out and if you don't get ALL of the roots or peices of the roots they WILL return
if they have been let get that out of control then they need mowed down because spraying would be hard and very ineffective mainly becuase you have aot of old growth that isn't producing leaves or blooms and it woul be difficult hetting adequete chemical on all of the plants to do a efficient job of destroying themKingfisher":1llpjbge said:Angus Cowman":1llpjbge said:kind of extreme and very costly to destroy a whole field when a little spray will do the job
plus on locust tress you can doze them out and if you don't get ALL of the roots or peices of the roots they WILL return
How do you figure we going to " destroy " the field.....it ain't good already............ya'll must have bigger tractors than we have at this farm, or we got way bigger berry patches..... How would you spray a big one? With an airplane? Like I said maybe our " patches" aint the same...........we are looking forward to bringing ladders to climb ours this year if it will rain a little........
You've missed a great pleasure in life. When I was a kid we would build a scaffold the length of the berry patch, about 200 yds long by 30-40 feet high. It would get swallowed by the berries and the next year we ould build a new one. The inside of this wall of crap was hollow to about 10 feet and the sides about 20 feet on a side. In Seattle that's the way it was done in the 40s-50s. As they ripened we would pick them everyday for probably a month or so. My mother loved those sorry things and canned them by the gallon. That was our fruit all winter. To this day I won;t eat anything with blackberry in it. Maybe that's part of my vendetta against them here.Angus Cowman":3ad72jq4 said:I have seen some pick blackberry briars but don't think I have ever seen any big enoough that I needed a ladder to pick berries most and I have seen some BIG patches a pair of limb nippers are usually what we used and woukld cut our way into the patch as we picked the berries on the outside and we would cut away the dead briars
If you mow them, wait till next year to spray them. If you spray this year you'll waste chemicals. The growth won;t match up with the root stock and all you'll do is kill off the top growth, next year they'll come back with a vengence.Angus Cowman":2ap5dudu said:if they have been let get that out of control then they need mowed down because spraying would be hard and very ineffective mainly becuase you have aot of old growth that isn't producing leaves or blooms and it woul be difficult hetting adequete chemical on all of the plants to do a efficient job of destroying them