SKU: 83160960241
3 way selective herbicide label

3 way selective herbicide label Strike 3

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Description

3 way selective herbicide label Strike 3RUP (license required) in CA, LA, MA, NJ, NM, and TX No sale in AK, HI, ME and OR Some weeds are harder to kill than others. With Strike 3 herbicide, tough weeds don't stand a chance. It contains three active ingredients to kill the most hard to control weeds on a variety of turfgrass sites and noncrop areas. It can even be mixed with certain fertilizers to promote healthy lawns while killing the weeds. When annual and perennial weeds invade the lawn,

RUP (license required) in CA, LA, MA, NJ, NM, and TX

No sale in AK, HI, ME and OR

Some weeds are harder to kill than others. With Strike 3® herbicide, tough weeds don't stand a chance. It contains three active ingredients to kill the most hard-to-control weeds on a variety of turfgrass sites and noncrop areas. It can even be mixed with certain fertilizers to promote healthy lawns while killing the weeds. When annual and perennial weeds invade the lawn, Strike back with Strike 3 weed killer.

How Strike 3 Herbicide Works

Strike 3 weed killer contains three active ingredients for systemic control of hard-to-kill weeds: dicamba, mecoprop-p and 2,4-D. They each have a specific mode of action to get right to the source and knock down the weeds from the target sites. It works on the most invasive weeds in the area, from spurge to dandelion. Strike 3 may be mixed with some liquid fertilizers to improve turf growth at the application site.

Where to Use Strike 3 Herbicide

Use Strike 3 herbicide to kill weeds on turfgrass and noncrop sites, as well as to control weed growth on sod farms. It kills invasive weeds and keeps them off home lawns and commercial turf, as well as along roadsides, rights-of-way and other labeled noncrop areas. Apply it with spray equipment to control weeds on nursery farms and golf courses, ornamental plantscapes and recreational areas. It removes annual and perennial weeds from ditches and keeps grassy landscapes free of clover, henbit and more.

Target Weeds

Get rid of weeds with the active ingredients in Strike 3 herbicide. It's an effective weed killer that targets everything from bedstraw to yarrow. It kills and controls black medic and buckhorn, chicory and chickweed, and dandelion and ground ivy. Use it to knock down henbit, knotweed and mallow, as well as pigweed, plantain and poison ivy. It works to kill the most invasive weeds on roadsides and home lawns, such as ragweed, speedwell and wild garlic. See the label for even more target weeds.

Benefits of Strike 3 Weed Killer

Strike 3 weed killer controls the weeds from the shoots to the roots, burning down the weed from the inside out. It's selective in nature, so it's more effective on target weeds and less harmful to surrounding turfgrass and ornamentals. It can be mixed with fertilizers and adjuvants to kill weeds and to promote healthier, stronger grass. Some benefits and features include:

  • Contains three active ingredients for better weed control
  • Safe for use on sod farms and home lawns
  • Can be combined with labeled fertilizers
  • Knocks out annual and perennial broadleaf weeds
  • Keeps golf courses free of invasive weed growth

Control Weeds on Turf with Strike 3

Whether it's clover and dandelion or henbit and spurge, Strike 3 herbicide kills the weeds on a variety of sites. It eliminates the weeds along roadsides, on sod farms and in residential turfgrass. It's effective against the most invasive annual and perennial weeds and contains three active ingredients to provide more successful weed control. When weeds take over home lawns and ornamental plantscapes, use Strike 3 weed killer to get rid of the weeds for good.

Specs
Manufacturer Heritage PPG
Active Ingredient Dimethylamine salt 2, 4 dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, Dimethylamine salt of (2)-R-2 (2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxy) propionic acid, Dimethylamine salt of dicamba (3,6,dichloro-o-anisic acid), Other Ingredients
Composition 30.56%, 8.17%, 2.77%, 58.50%
Container Size Gallon
Case Amount 4x1
Application Amount See label for details.

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SKU: 83160960241

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4.2 ★★★★★
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Product Reviews
J
Verified Purchase
jk Smiles
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
A book on dialogue should be experienced first as a book on tape
Format: Audio CD
I think of this more as a great master class lecture. Dialogue should be seemingly simple (we all talk), but McKee defines its essence and differences for prose, stage and cinema. The bulk is narrated by McKee, but the scene examples are read by voice actors and they do quite well. Even the roots of the English language are examined in order to make better decisions on your character's particular use of words. After listening the 10 hours twice while commuting, I finally picked up the book and read it. The book on tape is a better way to initially absorb the material, while the actual book helps to clarify the info. A must for all writers, especially screenwriters.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2018
L
Verified Purchase
Lori T. Sly
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
Helpful, but not as good as "Story" by same author, and it disses certain genres
Format: Hardcover
This book contains a lot of helpful information on how to write dialogue. It's dense with dialogue analysis and insights, tough to take in by just reading it through once. But it is helpful. McKee covers the three dialogue tiers (said, unsaid, unsayable) as well as how dialogue ties into story turning points and scene conflict type. I still have lots of practice ahead of me to figure out how best to do this in my story. I will definitely use his advice as a guide. He understands dialogue at a much deeper level than I do. However, many of McKee's dialogue examples did not speak to me. While I liked reading the dialogue examples for Breaking Bad, 30 Rock, The Sopranos, Frasier, A Raisin in the Sun, and The Great Gatsby, and agreed they were good, I disliked the dialogue from Shakespeare, Elmore Leonard, Sideways, Fraulein Else, and Lost in Translation. McKee says fine dialogue turns the reader/audience into a mind reader; I guess I'm not interested in movies which expect me to be as much of a mind reader as those latter examples did. I totally missed the subtext of the dialogue in those until he explained it to me as an aside. And that's after I already saw most of those movies! If I have to guess what every character means with every line, that's too much work and too little entertainment for me. Maybe mystery lovers liked the dialogue in "Lost in Translation"; I'm not a mystery lover. McKee quoted one novelist as saying that the crux of good writing is to, "Make em laugh, make em cry, make em wait." Lost In Translation and its dialogue did none of that for me. The subtext was so confusing and subtle that I lost interest in the movie. I can't even remember what it was about anymore, only that it won some award and I had no clue why. McKee says that with rare exceptions, a scene should never be outwardly and entirely about what it seems to be about. Dialogue should imply, not explain, its subtext. An ever-present subtext is the guiding principle of realism. Nonrealism, on the other hand, employs on-the-nose dialogue in all its genres and subgenres: myth and fairytale, science fiction and time travel, animation, the musical, the supernatural, Theatre of the Absurd, action/adventure, farce, horror, allegory, magical realism, postmodernism, dieselpunk retrofuturism, and the like. It's a bit unclear how, if at all, anyone writing in any of these "nonreal" genres should take his dialogue advice. It seems to me that even sci fi scenes need some good dialogue with subtext to be engaging. With McKee, all the accolades go to what is implied and unsaid over what is said. I agree that subtext matters, but for me, he's out of proportion with how much it matters to most people and how hard audiences are willing to work to discover the intended subtext. Also, memorable spoken character lines can elevate movie themes and characterization like nothing else. In the end, I think this book is geared more toward writers who want other advanced writers as their audience rather than the average reader or movie watcher. And McKee admits it is definitely not geared toward sci fi, fairytales/myths, action/adventure, horror or allegory. It's almost as if he's saying those genres can't have excellent dialogue. I disagree. But it was still a helpful book to read, and one I will be thinking about and trying to more fully understand for a long time. McKee understands how character's subconscious drives can deepen what they say or avoid saying, and how dialogue interacts with many other aspects of a story to make it all work together.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2019
R
Verified Purchase
Ray Pryor
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Amazing.
Format: Kindle
Just like a good movie, the first 10 pages = mind blown. Wow, such really, really good material here. If you're new, this will help you a ton. If you're experienced, this book will help you realize WHY great dialogue is so great, enabling you to create the magic again and again. I love how McKee covers several medias ( screen, theater, novel ) but still stays true and clear on the concept. A virtual masterclass on the subject. One of the best screenwriting books out there, and Yes, it's well worth all the hype.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2017
K
Verified Purchase
Kindle Customer
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
So to speak
Format: Kindle
Previews did not show the Table of Contents, but it is worth searching the web for. The coverage includes practical techniques as well as case studies. Notes cover titles on topics over several decades. This book has four parts about what dialogue is, how it can mended, and how it can be created and designed. Trialogue, the third thing through which a pair of characters channel conflict in conversation, is an interesting concept because it overlaps social networks or media and comms devices; it is also looked at historically. Dialogue is reportedly the quickest way to fix a narrative text since it appeals to intuition. Those levels of depth are what the book is about. They can be found in first person voice. The approach could easily fill a site on the order of tropes for favorite titles, but for deconstruction and revision, which are also relevant to works in progress. It talks about finding characters in the dark, though not necessarily from the milieu, unless it were compressed and made to transfer meaning like in poetry, but reflexive so that it is symmetrical to the characters or human nature. If there is a boundary to be found, then this method is going to hit the lines to find out what happens then. The impact on the rest of the narrative elements is discussed. This extends back through the early philosophers, through tragedy, the merging of European roots into English, and the study of personalities to contemporary customs. Voice is plot.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 12, 2017
C
Verified Purchase
cf otto
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
ONE OF THE TWO BEST BOOKS ON SCREENWRITING
Format: Hardcover
Probably the best book on screenwriting ever (besides Egri), though there is also much here for the novelist and playwright. I am a professional TV writer, of long-standing (35 years), and I can tell you I used this book to figure out how to fix the problems of a complex pilot I'm writing; the author truly " guided me home." And lest you think I'm a McKee sycophant, I am not. I found little in STORY for me. The only thing I disagree with in DIALOGUE is that the author sells his own work short: it isn't just for those who are "lost" in their writing, like me, and the student, it's for anyone who writes fiction for a living, in any form, no matter how much experience they have. It's that good.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2016

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