Groundskeeping Journal Issue 33 2026 | Page 63

SPORTS PITCHES viewed especially unfavourably on surfaces where children play and come into direct contact with the turf. There’ s also the risk of spray drift or transfer onto adjacent natural grass pitches, potentially undoing hours of careful maintenance in a moment.
Enter electric weeding— an innovative, systemically acting method of weed control which kills weeds by passing an electric current through their tissues. The plant’ s natural resistance turns the electrical energy into heat, causing cells to rupture and die throughout the plant. Originally a Victorian idea, today the technology is experiencing a resurgence amid growing ecological and public health concerns over pesticides. Various devices are already in use, from spot-weeders for borders to tractor-mounted equipment used in commercial vineyards. Featured here is the eWeeding roller, a compact, battery-powered, push-along device which can be used in various outdoor urban environments- be it gravel car parks, concrete courts, asphalt playgrounds or block paving.
The technology works on artificial turf too. As the eWeeding machine is pushed along, two electrodes on
the underside make contact with the synthetic turf surface and close an electrical circuit the moment they touch a weed. Since the current path travels straight through the plant including its root system— rather than relying on absorption through the plant’ s leaves and vascular tissues— the effect is rapid and systemic. The result is a weed-free pitch, delivered as quickly as chemical treatments, with no regrowth from roots, no risk to operator health, and leaving a surface that’ s safe for play immediately afterward.
From Premiership football clubs, to Universities and councils, organisations are discovering that the eWeeding roller can transform their weed control on and off the pitch. Electric weeding is proving that turf care doesn’ t have to be a compromise between performance, safety, and sustainability. As the industry moves away from chemical dependence, this technology offers an innovative solution that will prove a win for players and operators alike.
GroundskeepingJournal
. co. uk | January / February 2026 63