Controlling Tough Broadleaf Weeds

 
 

Chaparral herbicide controls some of the most troublesome broadleaf weed and brush species, and it does so with many other features that make it the right choice for your operation.

  • Provides control of many broadleaf weeds that other herbicides miss, including wild carrot, hoarycress (whitetop), buckbrush, absinth wormwood (wormwood sage), biennial thistles (including bolted musk thistle), Missouri goldenrod and many others
  • Soil residual activity controls new weeds that can emerge in multiple flushes throughout the grazing season
  • A wide application window allows for a convenient treatment schedule
  • Unique dry formulation makes mixing easier
  • No license required to buy or apply Chaparral1
  • Does not contain 2,4-D
  • No grazing or haying restrictions for any class of livestock, including lactating dairy cows, horses (including lactating mares) and meat animals prior to slaughter. However, label precautions do apply to forage treated with Chaparral and to manure from animals that have consumed treated forage within the last three days. Consult the label for full details.
  • Low use rate for buckbrush — 2 to 3 ounces per acre — allows for a smaller environmental footprint due to less active ingredient being applied
  • Multiple modes of action help control a broad spectrum of weeds
  • Tank-mix compatible with other herbicides for effective one-pass control

Chaparral targets many difficult-to-control broadleaf weeds and woody plants, including:

  • Wild carrot
  • Snow-on-the-mountain
  • Musk thistle
  • Missouri goldenrod
  • Ragweeds
  • Buckbrush
  • Locust
  • Rose
  • Blackberry

Product-related Literature (PDF format):

Chaparral for Difficult-to-Control Weeds Fact Sheet (247 KB PDF)
Chaparral Herbicide Technical Information (169 KB PDF)