Top-rated weed maintenance pros.

Get matched with top weed maintenance pros in Williamsburg, PA

Enter your zip and get matched with up to 5 pros

Need a pro for your weed maintenance project in Williamsburg, PA?

Select your specific project to find the pro for you.

TRUSTED BY WILLIAMSBURG, PA HOMEOWNERS

  • Average homeowner rating star icon4.1
    Average homeowner rating
  • Verified reviews icon34
    Verified weed maintenance services reviews

Find Weed maintenance pros in Williamsburg

No results for Weed maintenance pro in

Try adjusting your search criteria.
Weed Services questions, answered by experts

There are organic herbicide options that will kill grass but not flowers, including white vinegar or a dish soap solution. Commercial selective herbicides can also target grass over other plants, but read the instructions carefully to avoid damaging your garden. Herbicides that kill grass but not flowers usually include ingredients like clethodim and sethoxydim. Otherwise, your best bet will be to weed by hand.

Herbicides containing a combination of the active chemical ingredients dicamba, fluroxpyr, and quinclorac are most effective at purging your turf of white clover. However, for small home lawns, organic prevention and control can be very effective methods for killing clover weeds and save you from using harmful pesticides that might damage your lawn.

Look for a broadleaf herbicide, one that has been formulated specifically for dandelions and is considered grass-safe.

It’s not legal to intentionally damage a neighbor’s tree. Even if the roots of a tree encroach into your yard, if you damage or kill a tree that belongs to your neighbor, you can be held liable for the damage in most cases. Since herbicides can spread through the tree, causing damage to the whole tree and not just the roots that are on your side of the property line, you shouldn’t poison your neighbor’s tree. The other downside to this method is that if the tree dies, it can fall onto your property and cause more damage, so herbicides are best avoided in this circumstance.

It’s best to pull weeds when the soil is wet, as it’s much easier. Wet soil is much softer than dry soil, making it easier to pull the entire weed up by the root. Also, since the soil is wet, the roots will let go of the soil and slide up with less resistance. Be careful when working on your wet garden, though, as wet soil is easier to compact, which can harm your plants.

The Williamsburg, PA homeowners’ guide to weed maintenance services

From average costs to expert advice, get all the answers you need to get your job done.