Titanium Gear Industries (domestic source)

Besides, I thoroughly believe Titter is a gorgeous Russian chick with a chemistry degree so I like to imagine slipping the extra bucks into her panties.
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Don’t buy all the trailer trash bullshit.
I too, live in a fantasy world of make believe.
 
I always send a little extra. And if he ends up with a few extra bucks then that's fine with me. It's like a mini donation towards testing raws. Lol

Edit: or scarf money for @TitaniumGear (TGI) :p


I always split my dosages up so one of them was a pre-workout.

Also, I always send him extra. I’ve been short a couple times, and he told me not to worry about a couple of bones.

Figured sometimes he wins, sometimes I win, it all evens out. Plus, I like to tip my waitress’s :D
 
@mp46

I noticed I had a literal metric shit ton of clover in my yard

What’s the best spray for clover. Also, does it only target clover, or will over spray destroy my lawn?

Will my yard look ridiculous is 30% of the clover coverage disappears?

Will the grass just reseed itself naturally?

Thanks bro. Also I used some ritz clothing dye in my sprayer so I could see where I am spraying at. Worked pretty well

A lot of ways to go about this, clover is self sufficient and produces it's own nitrogen, so it'll pop up in malnourished lawns already low in nitrogen. So applying a nitrogen rich fertilizer to boost your lawns growth should help it overcome the clover. Raise the height on the lawn mower, taller grass will help cover the lower growing clover and block the sun, no sun no photosynthesis, no clover.

You can apply things like ammonia to the clover which will help kill it, just make sure you avoid contact with other plants. Also something like glyphosate (roundup) but of course it'll kill everything else so be careful spraying it around, although there's no long term effects to the lawn, it'll eventually disperse and shit will grow back in a few months. There's perennial and broad leaf killers like pendimethalin, find a fertilizer/ feeder that contains that as it targets weeds and broad leaf plants (clover), without killing the grass (not a broad leaf).
 
A lot of ways to go about this, clover is self sufficient and produces it's own nitrogen, so it'll pop up in malnourished lawns already low in nitrogen. So applying a nitrogen rich fertilizer to boost your lawns growth should help it overcome the clover. Raise the height on the lawn mower, taller grass will help cover the lower growing clover and block the sun, no sun no photosynthesis, no clover.

You can apply things like ammonia to the clover which will help kill it, just make sure you avoid contact with other plants. Also something like glyphosate (roundup) but of course it'll kill everything else so be careful spraying it around, although there's no long term effects to the lawn, it'll eventually disperse and shit will grow back in a few months. There's perennial and broad leaf killers like pendimethalin, find a fertilizer/ feeder that contains that as it targets weeds and broad leaf plants (clover), without killing the grass (not a broad leaf).


So I need to establish more nitrogen. Any specific fert you recommend. I have been using milgornite which is only 6-4-0.

Also, I was wondering more specifically about a clover targeting killer , if you have any experiences with them

upload_2019-7-8_21-20-4.png

Active ingredient in this is triclopyr, which is supposed to target broad leaf and Leave grasses alone
 
So I need to establish more nitrogen. Any specific fert you recommend. I have been using milgornite which is only 6-4-0.

Also, I was wondering more specifically about a clover targeting killer , if you have any experiences with them

View attachment 114922

Active ingredient in this is triclopyr, which is supposed to target broad leaf and Leave grasses alone

I don't know much more about specific ferts than google, that wasn't in my wheel house @TitaniumGear (TGI) would say. I'd start with something like you showed. If you get around to it a double or triple action granular, they'll have the fert and broad leaf killer, then maybe a preventative compound to stop them from coming back.
 
I don't know much more about specific ferts than google, that wasn't in my wheel house @TitaniumGear (TGI) would say. I'd start with something like you showed. If you get around to it a double or triple action granular, they'll have the fert and broad leaf killer, then maybe a preventative compound to stop them from coming back.

Awesome I’ll look into something thats dual purpose. So if it ends up killing clover, does the grass grow in its place and it’s seemless, or will I have patchy spots in my yard?

Edit: thanks for chiming in
 
Kind of both, grass should grow in it's place as the clover dies off, but it may leave patches. If the clover is really bad, perhaps do some spot seeding, just make sure you know exactly what kind of grass you already have you don't want to get two types growing.
 
Kind of both, grass should grow in it's place as the clover dies off, but it may leave patches. If the clover is really bad, perhaps do some spot seeding, just make sure you know exactly what kind of grass you already have you don't want to get two types growing.

I have no idea what type of grass I have. Also during some more research , there is usually tall fescue , and quack grass and being able to identify it is half the battle.

Can you tell by a picture, if not where would I be able to figure it out? Sorry for all the questions hahah
 
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