 Hey, Tim Crow here with the Alabama Cooperative Extension. Just out in the landscape today, looking in some of our turf grasses, just to kind of see what weed issues we're dealing with right now. Hopefully everybody got a spring pre-emergent put out late February, first to March, and you're sitting in pretty good shape as far as our warm season turf grasses go. Most of what's kind of playing out right now is cool season weeds. It's germinated back in the fall, kind of early winter. And they're kind of playing out. The heat's going to drive those out, whether we do anything or not. So we've kind of turned our attention away from those weeds and towards the warm season weeds that are starting to pop up now. And our main target weed, most of the time here in the south for warm season turf grasses such as Bermuda grass or Zoysia or Centipede, we're usually targeting crabgrass, okay? Crabgrass usually germinates when soil temperatures get into that 55 to 60 degree range, which we are there. I'm seeing some crabgrass popping up in shrub beds, out in the turf grasses, all those different areas. So we have hit that soil range. And so if we didn't have a pre-emergent out, we're about to have a lot of crabgrass on our hands. Now crabgrass, it's a warm season annual weed. So what's popping up now is from seeds from last year that played out in early fall when we got a frost and it dropped those seeds. And they laid there in overwintered and now they're starting to germinate. And again, that's why pre-emergence are so important to help prevent situations from getting too out of hand in our warm season turf grasses. Now some good options for that. Pendameplin products, prediming products, dimension. All three are very good at controlling crabgrass. And they also have a big or a large broadleaf label, as far as weeds as they control this well. So good options for preventative control. If we do have some crabgrass like that I've got here, we've got certain seeds, small seedlings pop up. And this is about the size that we want to attack crabgrass, if we've got it in our landscape. Once it gets a little bit larger than that, it really gets hard to control from a herbicide standpoint. So some post-emergence that we can use if we do have some. Would be Celsius. It's made by Bear Chemicals. Very good product as far as controlling crabgrass. And then herbicides that contain quinchloride. Both of those are good post-emergent options if we have to spray some crabgrass out of our warm season turf grasses. Again, preventative controls, pendameplin, prediming, dimension, all three good pre-emergence. Quinchlorac products as well as Celsius are good post-emergent options. If you have any questions, you can also always contact your local extension office or you can visit our website at aces.edu.