Sedges are some of the most troublesome weeds found in lawns and other turfgrass: unlike most weeds, they are not controlled with applications of traditional grass or broadleaf herbicides. Nufarm Prosedge® Selective Herbicide2 offers selective post-emergent control of sedges in turf and around woody ornamentals in landscaped areas..
FORMULATED FOR NUTSEDGE CONTROL
- Excellent control of yellow and purple nutsedge and horsetail
- Kyllinga suppression
- Easy-to-use water-soluble formulation
- Rainfast 4 hours after spraying
- Registered for use on numerous cool- and warm-season grasses
APPLICATION RECOMMENDATIONS
FOR POST-EMERGENT CONTROL OF PURPLE OR YELLOW NUTSEDGE
For post-emergent control of purple or yellow nutsedge found in established turfgrass, apply 2/3 to 1 1/3 ounces by weight /A after nutsedge has reached the 3 to 8 leaf stage of growth.
If a second treatment is required, apply 6 to 10 weeks after the initial treatment. As a sequential treatment, when new purple or yellow nutsedge plants have reached the 3 to 8 leaf stage of growth, apply 2/3 to 1 1/3 ounces by weight /A.
Use 0.25 to 0.5% nonionic surfactant, or 1 to 2 quarts per 100 gallons broadcast, or 2 teaspoons (1/3 fl oz) per gallon spot treatment.
When applied as directed, the following established turfgrasses are tolerant to application of this product:
Cool-season grasses: creeping bentgrass, fine fescue, Kentucky bluegrass, perennial ryegrass, tall fescue
Warm-season grasses: bahiagrass, bermudagrass, centipedegrass, kikuyugrass, seashore paspalum, St. Augustinegrass, zoysiagrass
FOR POST-EMERGENT CONTROL OF HORSETAIL
For post-emergent control of horsetail (Equisetum arvense) in roadsides, rights-of-way, tank
farms, lumber yards, fuel storage areas, fallow land and fence rows, apply 2 2/3
See label for complete application rates and recommendations.
Turfgrasses (established lawns, ornamental turfgrass, landscaped areas, commercial and residential turfgrass) Non-crop sites (including airports, cemeteries, fallow areas, golf courses, landscaped areas, public recreation areas,