ATH
Been here much more than a while
- Location
- Findlay, Ohio
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Application methods vary -- squirt bottles, sponge rubber-banded to the end of a stick (herbicider carries the solution in something like a cut-open milk carton to dip the sponge into for refills), or a mini paint roller (3-4") again with a dip container. The roller also makes it easy to apply herbicide to leaves or the stem of stuff that's too small to cut.
I tried putting a sponge with a wire tie on the end of backpack sprayer. It worked well, but hitting the sponge on the stump a few hundred times meant we chewed through sponges pretty quickly. Not a big deal, they are cheap. We switched to scotch pad sponges and they last a full day. We had good results with minimal sprouting.
Both points are good to remember:.....
When there are tons of small cut stems to treat, some will be missed. We often accept that knowing that whatever gets missed, or needs retreatment, will become obvious soon enough. It's never a one-and-done job anyway so one or more return visits will be needed.
1) Some WILL be missed. Sometimes just not treated because its easy to lose them in thick piles. Others for whatever reason it doesn't take. But 90% hit and efficacy is very realistic.
2) Even if the first round is 100% effective, there will still be new seedlings coming along. They need revisited. I generally recommend at least every other year so they are caught small. We like mid-fall visits when the invasives are the only thing still green so they are easy to spot. Sunny and temps over 60 degrees and foliar treatment with glyphosate is very effective.










