Amazon has 14.29-lb Scotts Turf Builder Weed and Feed 3 (5000 Sq. Ft.) for $14.86. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders $25+.
Thanks to community member zheka160 for finding this deal.
Walmart also has 14.29-lb Scotts Turf Builder Weed and Feed 3 (5000 Sq. Ft.) for $14.86. Shipping is free with Walmart+ (free 15-day trial) or on orders of $35 or more.
Rated 4.4 stars out of 5 overall based on 11,000 reviews on Amazon
About this store:
Amazon Return Policy: Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
This collaborative space allows users to contribute additional information, tips, and insights to enhance the original deal post. Feel free to share your knowledge and help fellow shoppers make informed decisions.
Amazon has 14.29-lb Scotts Turf Builder Weed and Feed 3 (5000 Sq. Ft.) for $14.86. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders $25+.
Thanks to community member zheka160 for finding this deal.
Walmart also has 14.29-lb Scotts Turf Builder Weed and Feed 3 (5000 Sq. Ft.) for $14.86. Shipping is free with Walmart+ (free 15-day trial) or on orders of $35 or more.
Rated 4.4 stars out of 5 overall based on 11,000 reviews on Amazon
About this store:
Amazon Return Policy: Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
The problem I have with the pre-emergent is that you can't overseed in the spring or early-summer to try to thicken up the lawn and fill in the spots where the weeds used to be and where the crabgrass wants to go. Basically, you have one shot per year in Sept to aerate and overseed.
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this[scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
Any lawn nerds.. ehh.. lawn lovers know what is the best way to get rid of crab grass? Used this last year and it was great.. except crab grass took the place of the š
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank seamonkeyminer
Quote
from shaggyucla
:
Any lawn nerds.. ehh.. lawn lovers know what is the best way to get rid of crab grass? Used this last year and it was great.. except crab grass took the place of the š
Preemergent is the main thing make sure to put some down early in spring to stop the seeds from this year sprouting for next year. There are a few products that are specific to crabgrass.
if youre in the idaho area my cousin found walmart had all sorts of fertilizer and grass seeds for $1 on clearance. no joke. online order with free shipping. ymmv and had no luck in cali
Preemergent is the main thing make sure to put some down early in spring to stop the seeds from this year sprouting for next year. There are a few products that are specific to crabgrass.
The problem I have with the pre-emergent is that you can't overseed in the spring or early-summer to try to thicken up the lawn and fill in the spots where the weeds used to be and where the crabgrass wants to go. Basically, you have one shot per year in Sept to aerate and overseed.
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this[scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
The problem I have with the pre-emergent is that you can't overseed in the spring or early-summer to try to thicken up the lawn and fill in the spots where the weeds used to be and where the crabgrass wants to go. Basically, you have one shot per year in Sept to aerate and overseed.
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this[scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
If seeding, use "tenacity" it is the only pre emergent that works with new seeds
2
Like
Helpful
Funny
Not helpful
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this [scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
73 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Curious.... with no NPK rating, how does this 'feed' the lawn? The 1.21% of 2-4-D for killing weeds is cheap.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank manolobindo
https://www.scotts.com/en-us/prod...weed-feed3
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank seamonkeyminer
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this [scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
But this spring instead of using the "Halts" in late March, I used this [scotts.com] product with a new seeding. Five to six weeks later, I did one more application with more seeds and I was able to both fill in the lawn and squeeze most of the weeds and crabgrass out. We are coming out of the summer heat and there's a little crabgrass and tufts of clover trying to sneak back in, but once the temp drops a little more I'm going to apply a hose/spray weed control and follow it with plain lawn fertilizer.
I only bring this up as I spent years fighting back the weeds and crabgrass because the lawn wasn't full. The "standard" Scotts plan where you use pre-emergent first locks you into this cycle.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Leave a Comment