social

Removing Weeds Between Pavers?

Apart from using a sharp knife, does anyone have any tips for removing weeds growing between paving slabs without resorting to harsh, environmentally-unfriendly chemicals?

Advertisement

By Sally Guyer from Cambridge, UK

Add your voice! Click below to answer. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 
April 17, 20091 found this helpful
Best Answer

I've been told that you can spray vodka on those weeds and they will die.

 
Anonymous
May 11, 20170 found this helpful

Yes,but will die happy.

 
May 28, 20170 found this helpful

or drink the vodka and you won't care about the weeds !!!

 
June 17, 20170 found this helpful

if I drink enough vodka I don't give a damn about the weeds!

 
June 26, 20170 found this helpful

Drink the vodka and the weeds won't bother you

 
April 19, 20180 found this helpful

Waste of vodka. Use vinegar.

 
Anonymous
July 15, 20190 found this helpful

would rather drink the vodka!!

 
July 27, 20190 found this helpful

Why waste vodka???

 

Silver Feedback Medal for All Time! 378 Feedbacks
April 19, 20094 found this helpful
Best Answer

My favorite is a gardener's flame weeder. It's a long wand attached to a propane tank, and you flame the weeds until their juices boil and they look bright green. Kills anything small, and like once a month you would re-treat anything with a bigger root. I like it because it's just so satisfying. No need to burn them to ash.

 
Anonymous
April 17, 20160 found this helpful

I'll tell my parents to try this out,& see what happens & what they'd think of it. Thank you

 
April 19, 20094 found this helpful
Best Answer

Buy a gallon of vinegar, remove one cup and add 1 cup of salt, shake to mix then add the cup of vinegar back to the jug. Spray on the cracks in the pavers. Be careful because it will kill anything it touches.

 
April 19, 20097 found this helpful
Best Answer

Boil water in the kettle and pour it over the weeds. Works every time!

 
April 20, 20093 found this helpful
Best Answer

Pour salt on the weeds. I usually get cheap salt for projects like this.

 
Anonymous
April 22, 20180 found this helpful

What kind of salt? Table salt? How much do you pour on it?

 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 168 Feedbacks
April 15, 20092 found this helpful

I poured full strength vinegar between the cracks of sidewalk and the weeds began wilting in the sun w/i an hour. The next day they were dead. Do regularly as needed.

 
April 17, 20092 found this helpful

Boiling water.

 
April 17, 20091 found this helpful

Lorelei you should know that the vinegar will also kill tree roots so be careful how much you apply. You only need 2 tablespoons to gallon of water and 1 tablespoon of cooking oil works too.

Advertisement

Sparingly near roots of things you want.

 
April 18, 20091 found this helpful

Boiling water really works great. Cost is minimal.

 
April 18, 20090 found this helpful

BORAX sold in the cleaning products section of your local stores is great for killing the weeds. Do not use 'close' to any flowers/trees. BORAX also keeps ants away. The instructions for weeds: "...sprinkling borax into all the crevices where you've seen weeds grow. When applied around foundation of your home, it will also keep ants away..." Also, Borax good for many other things around the house.

Advertisement


REF: Reader's Digest: Extraordinary Uses for ordinary things --ISBN 0-7621-0705-7

 

Gold Post Medal for All Time! 846 Posts
April 19, 20090 found this helpful

Vinegar is excellent and a healthy alternative to harsh chemicals that are bad for the environment :-) Using Vodka makes sense, too, because vinegar is a byproduct of fermentation ;-) I 'mist spray' full strength on non-windy days and am sure to use a piece of cardboard to protect any non-weed foliage that might be right next to the weeds I am spraying.

 
Anonymous
March 28, 20170 found this helpful

Salt and vinager

 
July 1, 20171 found this helpful

We have a 25 x 25 brick patio, and for over 25 years we use a simple formula. You can either use white vinegar (do not dilute) or plain old table salt. If you use the vinegar, we found it best to use during a dry period with little to no rain. Either spray it on the cracks or pour it (kinda wasteful to pour it unless you have a very steady hand and a small pouring spout. As for the salt, most places say to dilute it in water and then pour it on the weeds. This is both time consuming and wasteful.

Advertisement

We just pour it directly from the box onto the cracks and weeds. We the sweep it into the cracks as best as we can. Next use a hose with a fine mist nozzle and wet the salt. You don't want to drench it since it will then perhaps run into your nearby gardens or lawn. (we learned from experience)
Both of these methods work very well. It also does not harm animals nor insects. We have a thriving toad population that is unaffected by this. Hope this helps.

 
May 9, 20190 found this helpful

Oh, I would love to have a toad. : )

 

Add your voice! Click below to answer. ThriftyFun is powered by your wisdom!

 
In This Page
Categories
Home and Garden Gardening WeedsApril 15, 2009
Pages
More
🐰
Easter Ideas!
👒
Mother's Day Ideas!
🌻
Gardening
Facebook
Pinterest
YouTube
Instagram
Categories
Better LivingBudget & FinanceBusiness and LegalComputersConsumer AdviceCoronavirusCraftsEducationEntertainmentFood and RecipesHealth & BeautyHolidays and PartiesHome and GardenMake Your OwnOrganizingParentingPetsPhotosTravel and RecreationWeddings
Published by ThriftyFun.
Desktop Page | View Mobile
Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
Generated 2024-03-23 03:14:15 in 2 secs. ⛅️️
© 1997-2024 by Cumuli, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
https://www.thriftyfun.com/tf42996156.tip.html