$124.00
ย
Remedy Herbicide by Corteva is a concentrated, oil-soluble herbicide developed for controlling or suppressing troublesome woody plants and broadleaf weeds. It is labeled for use on rangeland, permanent grass pastures and established Conservation Reserve Program acres, including associated fencerows and non-irrigation ditch banks.
The flexible formulation can be applied to emerged vegetation as a foliar spray or directed to woody plants through basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump treatments. These application options make Remedy suitable for managing everything from scattered brush and fence-line encroachment to resprouting stumps and larger infestations.
Remedy contains triclopyr, a systemic Group 4 synthetic auxin herbicide. After entering a susceptible plant, triclopyr interferes with normal growth processes. This systemic activity helps control more than surface foliage, provided the correct rate, treatment method, timing and coverage are used.
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Brand | Remedyยฎ |
| Manufacturer | Corteva Agriscience |
| Product type | Selective woody plant and broadleaf herbicide |
| Active ingredient | Triclopyr, butoxyethyl ester โ 61.6% |
| Acid equivalent | 44.3% triclopyr, equivalent to 4 pounds per gallon |
| Herbicide group | Group 4 synthetic auxin |
| Formulation | Oil-soluble, emulsifiable liquid containing petroleum distillates |
| EPA registration number | 62719-70 |
| Primary use sites | Rangeland, permanent grass pastures, established CRP acres, associated fencerows and non-irrigation ditch banks |
| Application methods | Ground or aerial broadcast, foliar spot treatment, high-volume foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut stump |
| Signal word | CAUTION |
| Storage guidance | Store above 28ยฐF or agitate thoroughly before use |
The formulation, ingredient concentration, approved use sites and safety classification above apply specifically to Remedy Herbicide and should not be automatically transferred to another triclopyr product.
| Benefit | Practical advantage |
|---|---|
| Broad brush spectrum | Controls or suppresses numerous woody plants, vines and invasive broadleaf weeds |
| Multiple application methods | Supports foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump programs |
| Seasonal flexibility | Foliar treatments can be made during active growth, while many basal and stump treatments can be completed throughout the year |
| Systemic performance | Triclopyr moves within susceptible plants instead of providing only temporary contact injury |
| Suitable for established grass systems | Established pasture grasses are generally tolerant when the product is applied according to the label |
| Individual plant treatment option | Useful for targeting scattered trees, brush patches, fence lines and isolated problem plants |
| Tank-mix flexibility | May be combined with compatible, label-approved herbicides when a broader control spectrum is required |
| Pasture-management value | Removing competing brush can help recover usable grazing space and support more productive grass stands |
Remedy is promoted for flexible brush management and is currently positioned for control of more than 35 woody and broadleaf species. Actual results depend on species, plant maturity, environmental conditions, application timing and coverage.
Remedy is intended for land-management applications rather than general residential lawn or garden use.
| Labeled use site | Important qualification |
|---|---|
| Rangeland | May be used for label-listed woody plants and broadleaf weeds |
| Permanent grass pastures | Best suited to established grass stands |
| Conservation Reserve Program acres | Perennial grasses must be well established before treatment |
| Fencerows | Must be located within the labeled rangeland, pasture or CRP use areas |
| Non-irrigation ditch banks | Do not use on ditches that are carrying irrigation water |
| Grazed areas | Livestock, haying and slaughter restrictions must be followed |
Do not assume that Remedy is labeled for residential lawns, ornamental beds, crop fields, forests, irrigation channels or aquatic weed control. State registrations and additional local restrictions may apply.
The following table provides representative examples. Some plants require a particular application method, while others may receive suppression or top-growth control rather than complete control.
| Vegetation category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Woody brush and trees | Alder, aspen, beech, birch, blackberry, blackbrush, cottonwood, elderberry, hawthorn, locust, many oaks, Osage orange, eastern persimmon, poplar, sassafras, sumac, twisted acacia, wild roses and willow |
| Poisonous or invasive plants | Poison ivy, poison oak, saltcedar, tropical soda apple and sericea lespedeza |
| Vines and climbing plants | Virginia creeper, trumpet creeper, milkweed vine and pepper vine |
| Pasture broadleaf weeds | Black medic, burdock, chicory, clover, curly dock, dogfennel, lambsquarters, lespedeza, mustard, plantain, vetch, wild violet and yarrow |
| Growth-stage-specific targets | Dandelion and wild carrot are listed for top-growth control; huisache is listed for suppression |
| Method-specific targets | Saltcedar is limited to basal bark or cut-stump treatment; several vines and woody species are limited to basal or dormant-stem applications |
The complete label should be checked for species-specific footnotes, rates, timing and treatment limitations.
| Application method | Best suited for | Simplified treatment guidance |
|---|---|---|
| Broadcast foliar application | Larger or relatively uniform infestations | Treat actively growing broadleaf weeds or fully leafed woody plants with calibrated ground or aerial equipment |
| Foliar spot treatment | Scattered brush, vines and individual plants | Uniformly wet foliage without unnecessary runoff; a 1% to 2% volume solution is commonly used where permitted |
| High-volume foliar treatment | Dense individual brush plants | Thoroughly cover leaves, stems and root collars while using pressure and nozzles that minimize fine droplets |
| Low-volume basal bark | Individual woody stems generally under 6 inches in basal diameter | Apply an oil-based mixture around the lower 12 to 15 inches of the stem and root collar without spraying to runoff |
| Cut-stump treatment | Preventing resprouting after mechanical cutting | Treat the sides, root collar and outer cut surface, including the cambium area |
| Dormant-stem treatment | Leafless brush during the dormant season | Apply an oil-based spray to stems according to the dormant-treatment directions |
| Yucca crown treatment | Individual yucca plants | Direct a labeled oil mixture into the growing point and leaf bases |
Foliar performance is generally best when target plants have healthy foliage, adequate soil moisture and active growth. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments can often be performed during cooler months, but should not be made when snow, standing water, saturated bark or frozen conditions prevent proper contact.
These examples are volume-based references for certain spot, basal bark and cut-stump treatments. They do not replace acre-rate limits, calibration requirements or target-specific directions.
| Desired mixture | 1-gallon finished spray | 3-gallon finished spray |
|---|---|---|
| 1% foliar spot solution | 1.3 fl oz Remedy | 3.8 fl oz Remedy |
| 2% foliar spot solution | 2.6 fl oz Remedy | 7.7 fl oz Remedy |
| 25% basal bark or cut-stump solution | 1 qt Remedy + 3 qt labeled oil carrier | 3 qt Remedy + 9 qt labeled oil carrier |
For low-volume basal bark and cut-stump work, the product label allows a 20% to 30% Remedy concentration in a suitable oil carrier. A 25% mixture is a commonly presented midpoint within that range. Apply lightly and evenly rather than allowing the solution to run off the target surface.
The label also includes a 2% volume mixture for yucca crown treatment, equivalent to approximately 13 fluid ounces of Remedy in 5 gallons of finished oil-based spray.
| Activity | Restriction |
|---|---|
| Grazing by most livestock | No grazing waiting period is listed after application, except for lactating dairy animals |
| Lactating dairy animals | Do not allow grazing on treated areas until the next growing season |
| Hay harvest | Do not harvest hay for 14 days after application |
| Livestock intended for slaughter | During the application season, remove livestock from treated grass at least 3 days before slaughter |
| Worker or public reentry | Do not enter or allow entry into the treated area until sprays have dried |
| Reseeding grasses | Wait at least 3 weeks after treatment before reseeding |
| CRP land | Follow both pesticide-label restrictions and applicable CRP program requirements; use the more restrictive rule |
These restrictions are product-specific and can differ substantially from those of other pasture herbicides or tank-mix partners.
| Area of concern | Precaution |
|---|---|
| Personal protection | Follow current label PPE requirements. The reviewed label calls for long sleeves, long pants, shoes, socks and protective eyewear |
| Eye and ingestion hazards | Remedy causes moderate eye irritation and is harmful if swallowed |
| Skin exposure | Repeated or extended skin contact may cause an allergic reaction in some individuals |
| Sensitive vegetation | Prevent contact or drift onto cotton, grapes, peanuts, soybeans, tobacco, vegetables, flowers, citrus and other desirable broadleaf plants |
| Pasture legumes and forbs | Clover, other legumes and desirable broadleaf forbs can be severely injured or eliminated |
| New grass stands | Newly seeded grasses can be injured until they are well established |
| Bermudagrass | Injury may occur during extremely hot weather |
| Water protection | The product is toxic to fish and must not be applied directly to water or areas where surface water is present |
| Groundwater | Extra care is required on permeable soils where the water table is shallow |
| Fire hazard | The formulation is combustible and must be kept away from heat and open flame |
| Application equipment | Do not apply through irrigation systems or with a mistblower |
| Spray drift | Use coarse droplets, suitable pressure and low boom height; do not spray toward sensitive plants or during temperature inversions |
Because Remedy is highly active on broadleaf vegetation, even small amounts of drift can damage desirable plants. Application equipment should be cleaned thoroughly before it is used around susceptible crops or ornamentals.
Remedy Herbicide is used to control or suppress label-listed woody plants, brush, vines and annual, biennial or perennial broadleaf weeds on rangeland, permanent grass pastures and established CRP acres. It can also be used along associated fence lines and non-irrigation ditch banks.
Established grasses are generally tolerant when Remedy is applied correctly. However, it should not be described as harmless to every grass stand. Newly seeded grasses may be injured, bermudagrass can be affected during extreme heat, and desirable legumes or broadleaf forage plants such as clover are susceptible.
Foliar applications should generally be made when weeds are actively growing and woody plants have fully expanded, healthy leaves. Avoid treating drought-stressed, frost-damaged, insect-damaged or diseased foliage. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments offer a wider seasonal window and may be made throughout much of the year when the bark is accessible and not saturated.
The correct amount depends on the target species, application method, sprayer output and labeled rate. For certain foliar spot treatments, a 1% to 2% volume solution is commonly used. That equals approximately 1.3 to 2.6 fluid ounces per gallon, or 3.8 to 7.7 fluid ounces in a 3-gallon sprayer. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments generally require a much stronger oil-based mixture, often around 25% Remedy.
The label does not impose a grazing waiting period for most livestock. Lactating dairy animals are the exception and must be kept off treated areas until the following growing season. Hay cannot be harvested for 14 days, and livestock should be removed from treated grass at least 3 days before slaughter during the application season.
Remedy may be used on non-irrigation ditch banks located within the labeled pasture, rangeland or CRP sites. It must not be applied directly to water, to locations where surface water is present or to ditches currently carrying irrigation water.
No. Remedy and Remedy Ultra are separate registered products, even though both contain triclopyr and have similar brush-management uses. This description applies to Remedy Herbicide with EPA Registration No. 62719-70. Rates, packaging, state registrations and directions from one product should not be transferred to the other.
Remedy Herbicide by Corteva gives ranchers, landowners and professional applicators a versatile way to manage invasive brush and broadleaf weeds in established grass environments. Its concentrated triclopyr ester formulation supports targeted foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump applications, making it useful for both isolated woody plants and broader pasture-management programs.
For dependable results, identify the target species before treatment, choose the proper application method, calibrate equipment accurately and apply during suitable environmental conditions. Always follow the label attached to the product container, including all rate limits, livestock restrictions, state requirements, drift precautions and environmental protections. The pesticide label is legally enforceable and takes precedence over this product description.
ย
Remedy Herbicide by Corteva is a concentrated, oil-soluble herbicide developed for controlling or suppressing troublesome woody plants and broadleaf weeds. It is labeled for use on rangeland, permanent grass pastures and established Conservation Reserve Program acres, including associated fencerows and non-irrigation ditch banks.
The flexible formulation can be applied to emerged vegetation as a foliar spray or directed to woody plants through basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump treatments. These application options make Remedy suitable for managing everything from scattered brush and fence-line encroachment to resprouting stumps and larger infestations.
Remedy contains triclopyr, a systemic Group 4 synthetic auxin herbicide. After entering a susceptible plant, triclopyr interferes with normal growth processes. This systemic activity helps control more than surface foliage, provided the correct rate, treatment method, timing and coverage are used.
| Specification | Details |
|---|---|
| Brand | Remedyยฎ |
| Manufacturer | Corteva Agriscience |
| Product type | Selective woody plant and broadleaf herbicide |
| Active ingredient | Triclopyr, butoxyethyl ester โ 61.6% |
| Acid equivalent | 44.3% triclopyr, equivalent to 4 pounds per gallon |
| Herbicide group | Group 4 synthetic auxin |
| Formulation | Oil-soluble, emulsifiable liquid containing petroleum distillates |
| EPA registration number | 62719-70 |
| Primary use sites | Rangeland, permanent grass pastures, established CRP acres, associated fencerows and non-irrigation ditch banks |
| Application methods | Ground or aerial broadcast, foliar spot treatment, high-volume foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut stump |
| Signal word | CAUTION |
| Storage guidance | Store above 28ยฐF or agitate thoroughly before use |
The formulation, ingredient concentration, approved use sites and safety classification above apply specifically to Remedy Herbicide and should not be automatically transferred to another triclopyr product.
| Benefit | Practical advantage |
|---|---|
| Broad brush spectrum | Controls or suppresses numerous woody plants, vines and invasive broadleaf weeds |
| Multiple application methods | Supports foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump programs |
| Seasonal flexibility | Foliar treatments can be made during active growth, while many basal and stump treatments can be completed throughout the year |
| Systemic performance | Triclopyr moves within susceptible plants instead of providing only temporary contact injury |
| Suitable for established grass systems | Established pasture grasses are generally tolerant when the product is applied according to the label |
| Individual plant treatment option | Useful for targeting scattered trees, brush patches, fence lines and isolated problem plants |
| Tank-mix flexibility | May be combined with compatible, label-approved herbicides when a broader control spectrum is required |
| Pasture-management value | Removing competing brush can help recover usable grazing space and support more productive grass stands |
Remedy is promoted for flexible brush management and is currently positioned for control of more than 35 woody and broadleaf species. Actual results depend on species, plant maturity, environmental conditions, application timing and coverage.
Remedy is intended for land-management applications rather than general residential lawn or garden use.
| Labeled use site | Important qualification |
|---|---|
| Rangeland | May be used for label-listed woody plants and broadleaf weeds |
| Permanent grass pastures | Best suited to established grass stands |
| Conservation Reserve Program acres | Perennial grasses must be well established before treatment |
| Fencerows | Must be located within the labeled rangeland, pasture or CRP use areas |
| Non-irrigation ditch banks | Do not use on ditches that are carrying irrigation water |
| Grazed areas | Livestock, haying and slaughter restrictions must be followed |
Do not assume that Remedy is labeled for residential lawns, ornamental beds, crop fields, forests, irrigation channels or aquatic weed control. State registrations and additional local restrictions may apply.
The following table provides representative examples. Some plants require a particular application method, while others may receive suppression or top-growth control rather than complete control.
| Vegetation category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Woody brush and trees | Alder, aspen, beech, birch, blackberry, blackbrush, cottonwood, elderberry, hawthorn, locust, many oaks, Osage orange, eastern persimmon, poplar, sassafras, sumac, twisted acacia, wild roses and willow |
| Poisonous or invasive plants | Poison ivy, poison oak, saltcedar, tropical soda apple and sericea lespedeza |
| Vines and climbing plants | Virginia creeper, trumpet creeper, milkweed vine and pepper vine |
| Pasture broadleaf weeds | Black medic, burdock, chicory, clover, curly dock, dogfennel, lambsquarters, lespedeza, mustard, plantain, vetch, wild violet and yarrow |
| Growth-stage-specific targets | Dandelion and wild carrot are listed for top-growth control; huisache is listed for suppression |
| Method-specific targets | Saltcedar is limited to basal bark or cut-stump treatment; several vines and woody species are limited to basal or dormant-stem applications |
The complete label should be checked for species-specific footnotes, rates, timing and treatment limitations.
| Application method | Best suited for | Simplified treatment guidance |
|---|---|---|
| Broadcast foliar application | Larger or relatively uniform infestations | Treat actively growing broadleaf weeds or fully leafed woody plants with calibrated ground or aerial equipment |
| Foliar spot treatment | Scattered brush, vines and individual plants | Uniformly wet foliage without unnecessary runoff; a 1% to 2% volume solution is commonly used where permitted |
| High-volume foliar treatment | Dense individual brush plants | Thoroughly cover leaves, stems and root collars while using pressure and nozzles that minimize fine droplets |
| Low-volume basal bark | Individual woody stems generally under 6 inches in basal diameter | Apply an oil-based mixture around the lower 12 to 15 inches of the stem and root collar without spraying to runoff |
| Cut-stump treatment | Preventing resprouting after mechanical cutting | Treat the sides, root collar and outer cut surface, including the cambium area |
| Dormant-stem treatment | Leafless brush during the dormant season | Apply an oil-based spray to stems according to the dormant-treatment directions |
| Yucca crown treatment | Individual yucca plants | Direct a labeled oil mixture into the growing point and leaf bases |
Foliar performance is generally best when target plants have healthy foliage, adequate soil moisture and active growth. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments can often be performed during cooler months, but should not be made when snow, standing water, saturated bark or frozen conditions prevent proper contact.
These examples are volume-based references for certain spot, basal bark and cut-stump treatments. They do not replace acre-rate limits, calibration requirements or target-specific directions.
| Desired mixture | 1-gallon finished spray | 3-gallon finished spray |
|---|---|---|
| 1% foliar spot solution | 1.3 fl oz Remedy | 3.8 fl oz Remedy |
| 2% foliar spot solution | 2.6 fl oz Remedy | 7.7 fl oz Remedy |
| 25% basal bark or cut-stump solution | 1 qt Remedy + 3 qt labeled oil carrier | 3 qt Remedy + 9 qt labeled oil carrier |
For low-volume basal bark and cut-stump work, the product label allows a 20% to 30% Remedy concentration in a suitable oil carrier. A 25% mixture is a commonly presented midpoint within that range. Apply lightly and evenly rather than allowing the solution to run off the target surface.
The label also includes a 2% volume mixture for yucca crown treatment, equivalent to approximately 13 fluid ounces of Remedy in 5 gallons of finished oil-based spray.
| Activity | Restriction |
|---|---|
| Grazing by most livestock | No grazing waiting period is listed after application, except for lactating dairy animals |
| Lactating dairy animals | Do not allow grazing on treated areas until the next growing season |
| Hay harvest | Do not harvest hay for 14 days after application |
| Livestock intended for slaughter | During the application season, remove livestock from treated grass at least 3 days before slaughter |
| Worker or public reentry | Do not enter or allow entry into the treated area until sprays have dried |
| Reseeding grasses | Wait at least 3 weeks after treatment before reseeding |
| CRP land | Follow both pesticide-label restrictions and applicable CRP program requirements; use the more restrictive rule |
These restrictions are product-specific and can differ substantially from those of other pasture herbicides or tank-mix partners.
| Area of concern | Precaution |
|---|---|
| Personal protection | Follow current label PPE requirements. The reviewed label calls for long sleeves, long pants, shoes, socks and protective eyewear |
| Eye and ingestion hazards | Remedy causes moderate eye irritation and is harmful if swallowed |
| Skin exposure | Repeated or extended skin contact may cause an allergic reaction in some individuals |
| Sensitive vegetation | Prevent contact or drift onto cotton, grapes, peanuts, soybeans, tobacco, vegetables, flowers, citrus and other desirable broadleaf plants |
| Pasture legumes and forbs | Clover, other legumes and desirable broadleaf forbs can be severely injured or eliminated |
| New grass stands | Newly seeded grasses can be injured until they are well established |
| Bermudagrass | Injury may occur during extremely hot weather |
| Water protection | The product is toxic to fish and must not be applied directly to water or areas where surface water is present |
| Groundwater | Extra care is required on permeable soils where the water table is shallow |
| Fire hazard | The formulation is combustible and must be kept away from heat and open flame |
| Application equipment | Do not apply through irrigation systems or with a mistblower |
| Spray drift | Use coarse droplets, suitable pressure and low boom height; do not spray toward sensitive plants or during temperature inversions |
Because Remedy is highly active on broadleaf vegetation, even small amounts of drift can damage desirable plants. Application equipment should be cleaned thoroughly before it is used around susceptible crops or ornamentals.
Remedy Herbicide is used to control or suppress label-listed woody plants, brush, vines and annual, biennial or perennial broadleaf weeds on rangeland, permanent grass pastures and established CRP acres. It can also be used along associated fence lines and non-irrigation ditch banks.
Established grasses are generally tolerant when Remedy is applied correctly. However, it should not be described as harmless to every grass stand. Newly seeded grasses may be injured, bermudagrass can be affected during extreme heat, and desirable legumes or broadleaf forage plants such as clover are susceptible.
Foliar applications should generally be made when weeds are actively growing and woody plants have fully expanded, healthy leaves. Avoid treating drought-stressed, frost-damaged, insect-damaged or diseased foliage. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments offer a wider seasonal window and may be made throughout much of the year when the bark is accessible and not saturated.
The correct amount depends on the target species, application method, sprayer output and labeled rate. For certain foliar spot treatments, a 1% to 2% volume solution is commonly used. That equals approximately 1.3 to 2.6 fluid ounces per gallon, or 3.8 to 7.7 fluid ounces in a 3-gallon sprayer. Basal bark and cut-stump treatments generally require a much stronger oil-based mixture, often around 25% Remedy.
The label does not impose a grazing waiting period for most livestock. Lactating dairy animals are the exception and must be kept off treated areas until the following growing season. Hay cannot be harvested for 14 days, and livestock should be removed from treated grass at least 3 days before slaughter during the application season.
Remedy may be used on non-irrigation ditch banks located within the labeled pasture, rangeland or CRP sites. It must not be applied directly to water, to locations where surface water is present or to ditches currently carrying irrigation water.
No. Remedy and Remedy Ultra are separate registered products, even though both contain triclopyr and have similar brush-management uses. This description applies to Remedy Herbicide with EPA Registration No. 62719-70. Rates, packaging, state registrations and directions from one product should not be transferred to the other.
Remedy Herbicide by Corteva gives ranchers, landowners and professional applicators a versatile way to manage invasive brush and broadleaf weeds in established grass environments. Its concentrated triclopyr ester formulation supports targeted foliar, basal bark, dormant stem and cut-stump applications, making it useful for both isolated woody plants and broader pasture-management programs.
For dependable results, identify the target species before treatment, choose the proper application method, calibrate equipment accurately and apply during suitable environmental conditions. Always follow the label attached to the product container, including all rate limits, livestock restrictions, state requirements, drift precautions and environmental protections. The pesticide label is legally enforceable and takes precedence over this product description.
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