The Lawn Liberator: Our Story on Why We Felt This Was a Needed Solution
An early version of the Lawn Liberator (exposed end caps, less grips)
When we moved into our first homes, we never thought we’d turn into the neighborhood “lawn guys”.
Kill some weeds, mow the yard, throw down some fert, and call it a season. But as we started to see results, we naturally wanted more lawn domination. The weeds that only you can see had got to go. So we did what any homeowner getting into lawn care would do. Head down to the big box store, grab some weed killer, spray and pray. Our reward? A nice burnt lawn with the weeds still humming along.
Ok, the ready-to-spray from the hose isn’t accurate enough—I need a sprayer. Buy the sprayer, and spray some higher end expensive weed killer we found recommended on Reddit. Spray, pray, reap the rewards of a striped lawn and follow up applications required to wipe out the weeds. Too much overlap this time, above temperature limits the next time, sprayed on a windy day the time after that.
This frustrating cycle never seems to end.
There had to be a better way, where expensive herbicides and follow up applications weren’t needed, where over application wouldn’t kill your good grass, where temperature limits didn’t matter.
Out of this desperation, the Lawn Liberator was born. Quickly, accurately, and effectively target weeds the first time without damage to nearby grass. Using Round Up Quik Pro gave fast and permanent results, and striping of lawns was a thing of the past. But we aren’t limited to Round Up—any weed killer of your preference can easily be used—the application method of scissor tipped brushes applying weed killer to both sides of the leaf doubles contact area with the weed and helps target those tall wispy weeds that would just bend over without the two sided support.
Finally, we saw results, and you can too.