Use mulch: Mulch can be organic, such as bark or simply allowing grass clippings to stay on your lawn instead of bagging them after you mow. Or it can also be inorganic, such as plastic or lava rocks. Mulching is obviously the opposite of aerating your lawn. This form of residential weed control can keep weed seeds from reaching the dirt or it can keep pre-exiting seeds from sprouting. Since mulching will also kill the grass underneath it, it's best used around the perimeter of your lawn, where the grass is already growing the thinnest.
Pour on molasses: You probably know molasses simply as a delicious addition to gingerbread cookies. However, this natural sweetener can also be used to kill certain types of weeds. Molasses can be applied to your lawn as a fertilizer, before weeds sprout, giving you a healthy lawn that weeds can't penetrate. If your lawn is already full of weeds, it can also be applied as a herbicide. For residential weed control of already-growing plants, mix one cup of molasses into a gallon of …show more content…
If weeds and grasses are springing up in the cracks in the cement, they can make your entire yard look like a mess. You may already have tried vinegar water as a residential weed control solution, but the addition of salt and dish soap will make the application much more effective. Adding a cup of salt and a spoon of dish soap to a gallon of pure vinegar will prevent any plant from growing where the solution is applied. As a result, this liquid obviously should not be applied in the middle of the lawn