If you’ve ever sprayed weeds yourself and watched them turn brown almost immediately, you might expect the same thing from professional lawn care.
So when you hire a professional service and the weeds don’t die instantly, it can feel like nothing is happening.
In reality, the opposite is true.
What you’re seeing is the difference between contact herbicides and systemic herbicides—and that difference is exactly why professional weed control delivers longer-lasting results.
Contact vs. Systemic Herbicides: What’s the Difference?
Contact Herbicides — Fast, but Temporary
Contact herbicides work by damaging only the part of the plant they touch.
They:
- Act quickly, often within hours or a couple of days
- Cause visible “burning” or browning of the leaves
- Only affect above-ground tissue
The limitation is simple: they don’t reach the root system.
That means many common weeds—especially perennial weeds like plantain, clover, and wild onion—can recover and regrow after treatment.
According to NC State Extension guidance, contact herbicides only control the tissue they contact and do not eliminate underground plant structures, which allows regrowth.
Systemic Herbicides — Slower, but Complete Control
Systemic herbicides take a different approach.
They:
- Are absorbed through the leaves
- Move throughout the plant via its vascular system
- Travel down into roots, rhizomes, and growing points
- Kill the entire plant from the inside out
Because of this process, results take longer to appear.
NC State Extension explains that systemic herbicides are translocated throughout the plant and may take several days to weeks to fully kill it—even though the product is actively working during that time.
Why Slower Results Are Actually Better
This is the key point most homeowners miss:
Fast results are often cosmetic. Slow results are complete.
When a weed is “burned down” quickly:
- The top of the plant dies
- The root system often survives
- The weed comes back—sometimes stronger
When a systemic product is used properly:
- The plant continues functioning long enough to absorb the herbicide
- The product is moved into the root system
- The entire plant is eliminated
In fact, killing the leaf tissue too quickly can reduce effectiveness, because it limits the plant’s ability to move the herbicide internally.
Why Timing and Application Matter
Professional weed control is not just about the product—it’s about when and how it’s applied.
Systemic herbicides perform best when:
- Weeds are actively growing
- Temperatures are within optimal ranges
- The plant has sufficient leaf surface for absorption
NC State emphasizes that environmental conditions and plant health directly impact herbicide performance. Applications made during stress, dormancy, or poor growing conditions can reduce effectiveness.
That’s why a professional program is built around:
- Seasonal timing
- Turfgrass type (centipede, Bermuda, etc.)
- Local climate conditions in the Coastal Plain
- Proper product selection and rates
What You Should Expect After Treatment
When we treat your lawn, here’s a realistic expectation:
- Days 1–3: Little to no visible change
- Days 4–10: Yellowing and slowed growth
- Days 10–21: Progressive decline and full control
That gradual response is a sign the herbicide is working through the entire plant—not just burning the surface.
The Bottom Line
At Blackman & Sons Lawns & Landscapes, we focus on results that last, not quick cosmetic fixes.
That means:
- Targeting the entire weed, including the root system
- Reducing the likelihood of regrowth
- Supporting healthier, more competitive turf over time
Because effective weed control isn’t about making weeds look dead overnight—
It’s about making sure they don’t come back.
Ready for Long-Term Weed Control?
If you’re tired of weeds returning after DIY treatments, we can build a program tailored to your lawn using:
- NC State Extension-based practices
- Proven professional products
- Proper timing for our Fayetteville-area conditions
Vince Blackman
Blackman & Sons Lawns & Landscapes Serving Fayetteville, Vander, Hope Mills, and surrounding communities
