🌿 Clean Green, Live Clean!
Natural Elements 30% Vinegar is an industrial-strength cleaning solution that is 6x stronger than regular vinegar. This biodegradable product is perfect for a wide range of cleaning tasks, from removing tough stains to maintaining your garden's health. With its highly concentrated formula, it can be diluted for various uses, making it an eco-friendly alternative to harmful chemicals.
E**I
Works great on hard to kill weeds
We use this for killing weeds and it works great as a high strength alternative to some of the not so great weed killing products that are roughly the same price per gallon at the end of the day.
P**T
Super good for killing grass and weeds.
I went natural for my property about 10 years ago. This vinegar is perfect for killing grass and weeds. I especially like it along the chain link fence line, because weed whacking that is a real pain in the patootie. Just be sure to apply on a dry day where rain isn't likely for at least overnight.It's spendy, but worth it!
B**N
Weed Killer
This vinegar works excellent as a weed killer! I have been using Roundup or 40 years and this is safer and works better!
A**P
Using it against weeds in my xeriscape lawn
Don't want to use [opposite of square and down] on my lawn. It's a neurotoxin and bad for the environment. Trying to do my part, however little it might be. I have a xeriscape lawn, living in the desert. Don't have to mow, but the weeds are a problem. Hubby used to do it, now it's my job. Let it go too long and now it's worse by many-fold, as some of the roots go down several feet at this point.I read an article from a well known magazine that said you shouldn't use vinegar on weeds because it doesn't work very well. Mmmmm, depends. what strenght is being used? Vinegar comes in 5% (the most common strength), 6%, labeled cleaning vinegar, 20%, 30%, 45%, 75%, etc. And if you spray the weed with vinegar it may kill the tops, but depending on it's size and how much you use it might not get all the way down the roots. Right now I'm digging up the weeds/roots and then spraying this high potency vinegar to kill any root system that I may have missed (the bigger the root that I think might still be down there, the more I spray so it will go down farther). I also like to spray over the area I dug up for any roots that might have become loose in the soil (don't want them re-starting a new plant) or ungerminated seeds.Vinegar doesn't differenciate between weeds and the plants you want, so you need to be careful if you have a garden or a grass lawn. You could try a sprayer that allows you to pinpoint, but any overspray will damage/kill other living plants nearby (maybe use a pinpoint spray and spray slowly?), especially on a windy day - as I've seen on my lawn. Just digging up the roots helps quite a bit, but I don't intend to do this ever again (!!!), so that's why I am doing both. If you catch your weeds when they are young you won't have to go through what I have.This is a strong acid, so you might want to get some nitrile gloves to protect your hands. I used this vinegar to clean my toilet bowl (still had mineral deposits from before we moved in several years ago - the water here is very hard - and this really reduced the ring significantly; it will take at least one more treatment, meaning spraying and letting it sit for as long as possible before flushing) but didn't bother with gloves so took me about a week and a half to recondition my hands with lotion because they got so very dry.I also read that vinegar isn't good for concrete or cement, don't recall which. Dunno, so I'm trying to limit where I spray it. I did spray between the cracks in the driveway & walk since the weeds were becoming too big and prolific, but I need to find something that will not damage it long-term but is still friendly to the environment. I've read and heard that you can mix the vinegar with Dawn dishsoap and salt (don't recall the amounts), so the soap clings to the weed better and the salt dries it out. But while vinegar is only supposed to persist for 5 days (or so I read) salt is supposed to be damaging to the soil and I assume the soap isn't so good either, so I'm going with plain vinegar.The back yard is still a work in progress, but the front lawn, finished several weeks ago with only a few weeds that came up after the fact (probably missed under the stones or that germinated from a place I didn't spray, because I'm not spraying *everywhere*) looks really great. Neighbors appreciate. ;)
M**N
Potent!!!
Great product. I use this extra strength vinegar mixed with salt and dish soap as a spray mixture to kill weeds in grass free areas. The vinegar is extremely potent and will irritate your nostrils if directly inhaled. Definitely wear protective clothing when used. Unsure if I would use this product indoors (due to it’s strength) but it is an extremely effective weed destroyer.
J**Y
Natural Weed killer
This stuff worked like a charm. I used he concentrate vinegar, epson salt, and liquid soap. Within 45 minutes of spraying the weeds on the driveway, everything was drying up. After 3 days, the weeds were all crispy. I was able to use a leaf blower to clean off my driveway. It was perfect since we live on a farm and have chickens that graze.Warning: make sure to use a mask, protective eye wear and gloves. Because this concentrate is super strong. My skin would itch then burn if not washed off immediately.
A**R
Forget store bought Vinegar. This stuff works!
This was suggested to me by a friend for the weeds and poison ivy galore. WOW!!!! It killed of all of it in one application. I would highly and I mean HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS!!! And I shall be purchasing again. Arrived safe and no issues and fast delivery. Thankyou so much! Appreciate it!!!
T**D
works as advertised.
I won’t speak to specific use cases, but the Natural Elements 30% Vinegar (4-gallon pack) is a versatile solution that everyone with a home should keep handy. A must-have for various needs around the house!
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