How Weed Electrocution Fits into a Maryland Farm

The sparks are flying on Aaron Cooper’s farm, Cutfresh Organics, on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. Not the romantic kind, mind you, but the deadly kind. Cooper runs a weed electrocution unit called The Weed Zapper, which can deliver 15,000 volts of electricity directly to weeds via a tractor-mounted electrified copper bar, as it skims above a crop canopy. 

This tactic has been a weed control boost for Cooper, who purchased it to fight weeds like Palmer amaranth, redroot pigweed and even some grasses that sneak into his soybeans, sorghum and small grains fields.

The video below is a detailed look at how and when he runs the Weed Zapper, what equipment adjustments and costs it requires, and how it fits into other weed management tactics on his operation. You can use these timestamps to navigate the content.

00:00 – Intro
00:16 – The Weed Zapper
00:54 – Timing of Use
01:53 – Crops the Weed Zapper Works In
02:33 – Weed Species
03:04 – Crop Injury
03:16 – How the Weed Zapper Works
04:19 – Equipment Requirements
05:01 – Costs and ROI
05:29 – Safety Concerns
05:50 – How Does the Weed Zapper Fit with Other Management Tactics?
06:12 – Non-Organic Uses For the Weed Zapper
06:23 – Future Research

You can find more information on research into weed electrocution use in row crops here and more on Cooper’s use of the Weed Zapper here. And learn what researchers are finding about electrocution’s impact on soil health and organisms here

Follow along for more coverage of this topic on GROW News Page here.  


Video and feature and header photos by Claudio Rubione, GROW; text by Emily Unglesbee, GROW