Browse Forums Landscape & Garden Design 1 Feb 28, 2012 4:30 pm About a year ago I sprayed some weed n' feed on a strip of our lawn which is some kind of buffalo. I stopped spraying after a few seconds as the stream seemed to be coming out way too concentrated - lucky I did, because as I was fixing it, I saw the "do not use on buffalo" warning.... Oops ! Naturally enough, the strip of lawn I had sprayed it on (perhaps 70cm wide by the width of the lawn) died - as it had received a very strong dose of the weed n' feed, not just a standard conncetration dose. I was expecting that over time, the lawn next to the dead strip would grow into the dead area and fill it out, but that just hasn't happened, even in a small patch where I dug out the old lawn to give the new lawn some 'space' to grow into. So I was just wondering whether the weed n feed would have permanently poisoned the soil or whether there is something special I need to do to get the living lawn to grow into the dead area? Thanks ! Re: I killed some buffalo lawn with weed n feed, can I save 2Mar 15, 2012 1:08 am Weed and feed kills buffalo no matter what the concentration. Dig out all the dead grass, and plant runners from your living lawn into it. . . fertilize using seasol or similar as recommended. Re: I killed some buffalo lawn with weed n feed, can I save 3Mar 15, 2012 1:15 pm the spray to use on buffalo is Chemsprays Bindie, controls weeds but wont kill buffalo Da Vinci Outdoor Living Architectural landscaping http://www.davincioutdoor.com I've just had a look at the website. The company are just building broker's. There are plenty of similar companies that basically draw your plans (they own them so you… 8 4377 Hi all, has anyone been ask to do the weeds in their property while in the middle of build? We are under the impression that they are in control of the site while they… 0 975 the leaves that are now underground go yellow, the tips that poke through photosynthesise and have chlorophyll, same reason they grow rhubarb in the dark. 5 2912 |