Full description
Napalm, 300 ml - a systemic, broad-spectrum herbicide for controlling annual and perennial weeds in vineyards, orchards, vegetable crops, and flower beds.
Active ingredient: isopropylamine salt of glyphosate 480 g/L
Formulation: soluble concentrate (SC)
Duration of residual activity: 1 month or longer
Packaging: 300 mL
WHO classification: Class III (moderately toxic)
Advantages:
- Used for pre-sowing or pre-emergence treatment of over 150 crops. Can be used in both spring and fall.
- Completely destroys over 100 species of annual and perennial dicotyledonous and grass weeds.
- A systemic herbicide; after contact with leaves and green parts of stems, it penetrates the plant’s root system. The visual effect (wilting, yellowing) on annual weeds appears within 2–4 days, on perennial weeds within 7–10 days, and on shrubby vegetation within 20–30 days.
- The most effective method for successfully clearing fields and plots of stubborn weeds that reproduce not only by seeds but also by root suckers (and rhizomes, such as couch grass, pigweed, field bindweed, field thistle, etc.).
- It is used as a desiccant prior to harvesting grain crops, sunflowers, flax, and rapeseed, which improves grain quality by reducing moisture content and weed infestation in crops.
- It is low-toxicity and rapidly decomposes in the soil (within 14 days) into natural components: water, carbon dioxide, and phosphates, so it is not harmful to subsequent crops in the crop rotation.
- It is not washed away by precipitation within 2–3 hours after spraying.
- Penetrates the plant only through the leaves and young shoots; does not affect the plant through the soil, so it does not inhibit seed germination, allowing for weed control near beneficial plants, as well as before sowing or planting crops.
- Guarantees complete destruction of both the above-ground and root parts of weeds.
- An ideal partner for tank mixes with herbicides from the phenoxyacetic acid and sulfonylurea groups.
- Also recommended for controlling hydrophytic weeds (sedges, cattails, etc.).
Recommendations for use:
| Crop to be treated | Target pests | Application rate | Application method and timing |
|
Fruit orchards and vineyards
| Annual grass and broadleaf weeds | 40 ml per 5–8 L of water per 100 m² | Targeted spraying of growing weeds in spring (provided that cultivated plants are protected) |
| Perennial grass and dicotyledonous weeds | 80 ml per 5–8 L of water per 100 m² |
|
Vegetables, ornamental flowers grown for seed
| Annual grass and dicotyledonous weeds | 40 ml per 5–8 L of water per 100 m² | Spraying of growing weeds in spring, 2 weeks before crop sowing |
| Perennial grass and dicotyledonous weeds | 80 ml per 5–8 L of water per 100 m² |
Applying the product during the period of intensive weed growth, before they begin to flower, allows for the complete destruction of all stubborn perennial weeds, including creeping wheatgrass, pink thistle, field bindweed, and others.
Spraying is carried out with a freshly prepared solution in calm weather.
The first signs of the herbicidal effect appear no earlier than 3–4 days later, in the form of yellowing, followed by browning and wilting of the foliage.
For maximum effectiveness, apply the product to actively growing weeds at temperatures between +12°C and +30°C, ensuring no precipitation for 4–5 hours after application. Apply no earlier than 5–6 days before pre-sowing cultivation. Field work may resume 3–7 days after spraying.
Number of applications: - 2 times. In the spring, 1.5–2 weeks before planting potatoes, sowing vegetables, or other crops, and also in the fall to control perennial weeds.