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Old 01-05-2006, 11:15 PM
sockiescat sockiescat is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2005
Posts: 354
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Ether Jones Round-up is deactivated in the soil almost immediately when it does
an ion-exchange with clay particles. It also decomposes in the soil.
It doesn't decompose in the bottle or sprayer.

A follow-up question if I may. Does it matter what kind of water you
use to mix with the Round-Up? I use well water. My well has some iron
as well as other minerals I suppose. Do these impurities tend to
deactivate the Round-Up?

The reason I ask is, everybody I talk to seems to have better luck with
Round-Up than I do. They say the weeds are dead in a week. When I
use it, it takes up to three weeks to see any difference at all; and
sometimes I have to re-apply.

I'm not skimping on the mixture. I even tried tripling the amount.

I'm using it on weeds in my gravel driveway and between patio bricks.
Also on my trail in the woods to clear underground on and around the
trail.

A farmer friend even gave me a gallon of the commercial-grade stuff he
uses, and it didn't work any better.

I suppose the next step would be to try mixing with distilled water.
Haven't had the time to mess with that yet.


the kind of water that u use doesnt really make much of a difference we have rust in our water here on the farm and my hubby uses it for tank mixing of roundup. i think the thing thats most important is to make sure that u get a good even coverage on the weeds that u want to get rid of.
some weeds do need an extra application of roundup especially if they have some herbicide tolerance or if u are trying to clear a really weedy area.
roundup is a contact herbicide which means that it kills off whatever it hits, it is also non systemic which means that it does not stay in the soil but breaks down quickly as has been mentioned . hope this helps u some.
cyaaaa, sockiescat.