SKU: 45861635497
frequency herbicide

frequency herbicide Specticle FLO Turf Herbicide – Indaziflam Pre-Emergent Weed Control

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Description

frequency herbicide Specticle FLO Turf Herbicide – Indaziflam Pre-Emergent Weed ControlSpecticle FLO Herbicide Specticle FLO Herbicide is a professional grade selective pre emergent herbicide formulated with indaziflam for long lasting control of troublesome grassy weeds, annual sedges, annual kyllinga, and broadleaf weeds in labeled warm season turfgrass, landscape ornamentals, hedgerows, hardscapes, and natural areas. As a Group 29 cellulose biosynthesis inhibitor, Specticle FLO controls weeds by reducing seedling emergence before

Specticle FLO Herbicide

Specticle FLO Herbicide is a professional-grade selective pre-emergent herbicide formulated with indaziflam for long-lasting control of troublesome grassy weeds, annual sedges, annual kyllinga, and broadleaf weeds in labeled warm-season turfgrass, landscape ornamentals, hedgerows, hardscapes, and natural areas.

As a Group 29 cellulose biosynthesis inhibitor, Specticle FLO controls weeds by reducing seedling emergence before they become established. It provides extended residual pre-emergence control of key weeds such as crabgrass, goosegrass, annual bluegrass, annual sedges, annual kyllinga, and many broadleaf weeds when activated by rainfall or irrigation.

Features & Benefits

Long-lasting pre-emergent control of many annual grasses, broadleaf weeds, annual sedges, and annual kyllinga

Controls key turf weeds including crabgrass, goosegrass, annual bluegrass, doveweed, annual kyllinga, and many broadleaf weeds

Low-use-rate suspension concentrate formulation for professional applicators

Labeled for established warm-season turf, golf course fairways and roughs, sod farms, sports fields, commercial lawns, residential lawns, parks, and cemeteries

Also labeled for landscape ornamentals, hedgerows, hardscapes, natural areas, and certain non-crop bareground sites

Can be used in single or split application programs to extend residual weed control

Compatible with many labeled herbicide tank-mix partners when compatibility is confirmed before use

Labeled Use Sites

Specticle FLO is labeled for use on established warm-season turfgrass areas including golf course roughs and fairways, sod farms, sports fields, residential and commercial lawns, parks, and cemeteries. It may also be used in landscape ornamentals, hedgerows, hardscapes, managed natural areas on golf courses, roadsides, non-bearing fruit and nut trees in residential plantings, and non-crop areas such as paths, parking lots, curbs, sidewalks, driveways, around buildings, gravel areas, loading ramps, educational facilities, storage yards, vacant lots, fence rows, parks, and hardscapes.

Target Weeds

Specticle FLO provides pre-emergence control or suppression of many weeds including crabgrass, goosegrass, annual bluegrass, annual kyllinga, annual sedges, doveweed, barnyardgrass, foxtails, Italian ryegrass, perennial ryegrass, sandbur, common chickweed, mouse-ear chickweed, white clover, common dandelion, chamberbitter, Florida pusley, henbit, horseweed, kochia, common lambsquarters, lawn burweed, prostrate pigweed, redroot pigweed, common purslane, prostrate spurge, spotted spurge, common ragweed, shepherd’s-purse, annual sowthistle, velvetleaf, yellow woodsorrel, and other labeled weeds.

Application Notes

Apply Specticle FLO according to the product label and only to labeled sites. Specticle FLO must be activated by rainfall or light irrigation before weed germination for best pre-emergent performance. Uniform application is essential for satisfactory weed control. Apply in a minimum of 10 gallons of water per acre, or 1 quart of water per 1,000 square feet.

Do not apply to newly seeded turf, golf course greens, tees, collars, slopes immediately above greens, or weakened turf that requires significant recovery. Do not apply to cool-season turfgrasses or mixtures containing sensitive grasses unless thinning or removal is desired. Specticle FLO may inhibit root development, so observe all seeding, overseeding, sprigging, and sodding intervals on the label.

Product Information

Active Ingredient:
Indaziflam 7.4%

HRAC Group:
Group 29 Herbicide

Chemical Family:
Cellulose Biosynthesis Inhibitor

Formulation:
Suspension Concentrate (SC)

EPA Reg. No.:
101563-207

Signal Word:
Caution

Manufacturer:
Environmental Science U.S., LLC / Envu

Recommended Rotation Partner:
A labeled herbicide with a different mode of action. The label specifically references tank-mix or program use with products such as Ronstar FLO, Revolver, Celsius WG, Tribute Total, glyphosate, glufosinate, Acclaim Extra, and other labeled herbicides where appropriate for the site and weed spectrum.

Recommended Surfactant:
Not required for pre-emergent use. Use only when required by a labeled tank-mix partner and follow the most restrictive label directions.

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SKU: 45861635497

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4.1 ★★★★★
Based on 25 reviews
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Product Reviews
R
Verified Purchase
Rich
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Buy it.
This is not merely another guide to intensive care. Well-organized and detailed, it hits the right note between the things a beginner has to know (and probably has some idea about) and the things a beginner needs to know (but is clueless). It even includes a chapter on burnout. Recommended for everyone new to the ICU, and also everyone who has been around awhile. I’m going to get a lot of use from this text, I can already tell.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2018
W
Verified Purchase
W. Lonfrost
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 3
A little too beginner; doesn't translate well to USA patterns of practice
Format: Paperback
The book title really says it all, it really is the BEGINNER'S guide to the ICU for junior doctors and allied health professionals - more like an introduction to important concepts rather than a guide really. The strengths of the text come from its stated purpose of being a absolute, beginner's guide to critical care. The book would be appropriate for perhaps a 4th year med student or a intern who is very early in residency w/ little ICU experience or a newly minted APP; there's little to be gained by a advanced resident, fellow or practicing physician. The chapters are very short which provide a mere grazing-the-surface of important critical care concepts - some chapters are too short to really be useful (e.g. the paltry coverage of ultrasound in crit care (p. 159) is only 10 pages including pictures). The book, editors and authors are UK-based which makes the units of measurement, choice of drugs and some practice patterns, not consistent with what is typical in the USA. For this reason I cannot recommend this text for American learners; e.g. blood glucoses are measured in mmol/L internationally, however USA, Germany use mg/dL where a normal BG in UK may be "4.4" but in the US one might consider a normal BG "80". This carries over again with concepts of ABG's and their utility in ventilator settings, respiratory emergencies and sepsis, etc. which become more confounding when using the PaCO2/PaO2 kPa instead of the mmHg used in American ICU's. When a BEGINNER is trying to learn the FUNDAMENTALS of crit care I recommend that a learner be introduced to the concepts using data measurement they are expected to utilize in practice rather than going through the mental gymnastics of doing conversions and THEN making a treatment decision. The theme of UK and USA differences continues into drug therapy. For example when covering RSI and sedation the authors discuss the utility of sodium thiopental, however this drug has not been available in the USA for many years. In addition there were some other areas where some recommended drugs did not correlate w/ typical USA patterns and others that received hardly any mention (e.g. little mention of vasopressin as an adjunct in pressor support, other paralytics in RSI such as succinyl choline, rocuronium, CCB's and BB's in atrial fibrillation). Least of all there are multiple areas where drug/device names that refer to the same agent but would confuse a beginner starting in the USA (e.g. albuterol = salbutamol, aceteminophen = paracetamol, norepinephrine = noradrenaline, Guedel = OPA etc.). Lastly, on the topic of UK vs worldwide differences the epidemiologic data mentioned refers to UK populations making it somewhat of an abstraction of the prevalence of disease in your area of practice if you're outside the UK. Which is fine, just be aware of that. The chapters, however, are well organized and majority begin with a clinical case which I find is a approach that cements concepts in learner. If anything I feel that some are much to short, even for a beginner. I'm specifically referring to the Cardiac Arrythmias chapter (p 233). There is much to cover on this topic and the 5 pages dedicated to it is simply not enough and there is no further recommended reading. And importantly, the EKG figures were switched around on p234 and p235, which again does a beginning learner a disservice. I did find the chapters dedicated specifically to ICU concepts useful such as "Fighting the Ventilator" and "Endotracheal tube and tracheostomy problems" which cover just enough ground for the trainee. Unfortunately, none of the chapters have in-text citations with little primary references - I did have some questions regarding some chapter authors recommendations and I'm unable to look up where the works cited to review the quality of evidence. There are multiple chapter authors and unfortunately this creates some redundancies. I could only find one area where there was a contradiction between authors which one author stated there is no contraindication for insertion of a NPA in setting of base-of-skull fracture (p.79) and on the next chapter another author stating that "nasopharyngeal airway is contraindicated if there is the possibility of a base of skull injury!" (p.87) - less than 10 pages apart. Again, there's no primary texts referenced and I can't confirm where the best, up to date evidence lies. In SHORT: this is a useful text to the BEGINNER who is looking to obtain a broad overview of critical care CONCEPTS. It is pretty easy to read through and simple to digest where I a motivated learner could get through the full 440 pages relatively quickly and gain a good grasp & appreciation of the concepts of critical care. The text accomplishes its goal of being a BEGINNER'S GUIDE to ICU and explicitly identifies its target audience in the title: . . . . A Handbook for Junior Doctors and Allied Professional. I do NOT recommend the text to American trainees for the reasons above (drugs, units, differences in practice patterns) and I don't recommend the text to practicioners who have more experience.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2021
J
Verified Purchase
Jose
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 3
Material
Format: Paperback
The material is not the greatest very basic and it is all UK based
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2020
O
Verified Purchase
Olivia Lee
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Good
Format: Spiral-bound
Good quality book
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2026
S
Verified Purchase
shrima
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Essential Tool for Efficient and Accurate Medical Coding
Format: Spiral-bound
The book arrived in excellent condition. The pages are made with high quality paper The color coded sections makes it easy to find the information you need The Pros- Up to date user friendly features durable built. The Cons- The book is so big is it hard to carry around The book is an investment so I did not mind the price. Also in my opinion if you are taking the CPC exam it is best to have the latest version of the CPT book as most of the questions are about this section. I highly recommend the 2024 edition as some things have changed and it's best to have the up- to- date edition especially for class or testing. Tips- Use tab dividers to help you find the sections quicker during testing.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2024

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