Amazon has
13.35-lbs Scotts Turf Builder Halts Crabgrass Preventer w/ Lawn Food on sale for
$19.97.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
phoinix for finding this deal.
Features:
- Scotts Turf Builder Halts Crabgrass Preventer with Lawn Food stops crabgrass before it invades and feeds grass for a fast green-up after winter
- Prevents listed weeds including crabgrass, barnyard grass, foxtail, poa annua, chickweed, and oxalis
- Apply pre-emergent weed killer plus fertilizer to a dry lawn in early spring (before the 3rd or 4th mowing) before temperatures are regularly in the 80s
- Rain, snow, or freezing conditions after application will not affect product performance
- One 13.35 lb. bag of Scotts Turf Builder Halts Crabgrass Preventer with Lawn Food covers 5,000 sq. ft.
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Top Comments
If you already have it then what you want is Quinclorac. It expensive but it works. You don't need name brand, any Quinclorac powder will do. I mix 1 TBSP per gallon and it kills the crabgrass dead. You'll see it all turn yellow and die within two weeks. I have bermudagrass it doesn't harm it. If you're putting that down, add in some 2-4D at 1oz/gallon. That kills every broadleaf weed. That's much cheaper than Quinclorac, which usually costs about $65-$70 for a seasons worth. 2-4D is about $20 for a gallon, which yields 16 gallons. One more thing I put in mine is MSM powder which kills ryegrass. I mix all 3 together and spray it about once every 4-6 weeks because my neighbors have a yard of weeds that blow over and it kills every single weed, ryegrass, and crabgrass. I used to work for Scott's back in the day.
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It's still $29.97 at my local HD
This could easily help or kill any random lawn.
It says it has lawn food, I'm guessing nitrogen? it also mentioned "green" so I'm thinking iron but it does not specifically state the ingredients
30% Nitrogen
0% Phosphorous
4% Potassium
No iron in a product like this, need to buy something like ironite. A fertilizer like this feeds the grass, making it grow, while something like ironite will just make it greener (theoretically). Depending on the PH of your lawn would want to put down sulfur or lime with the iron. Typical ph between 6 and 7. If you need to raise the ph then put down lime, if you need to lower it put down sulfur. Iron stains concrete, so if putting down with a spreader then be sure to blow off the concrete if you have a concrete driveway. Don't put down iron when it's hot, or you'll burn your lawn. I like using iron more than fertilizer because it makes it nice and green without making it grow like crazy
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