25/04/05
Growers across the country must manage their set aside spraying
very much more effectively from this season if they are to keep
on top of troublesome grass weeds without compromising their
cross-compliance and ELS environmental assets, warns Agrovista
technical manager, Mark Hemmant.
"Spray timing is the single thing most growers get wrong
with their set aside glyphosate sprays," he stresses. "And,
with grass margins, beetle banks and conservation headlands to
nurture, everyone is going to have to pay far more attention
to minimising spray drift from now on.
"Spray grass weeds during tillering or at full ear emergence
and you'll almost certainly get complete control from a single
dose of a high activity glyphosate like Roundup Ultra. "Spray
too early during stem extension, though, and even the best formulations
will give you very variable control. The strong upward sap flow
tends to accumulate glyphosate in the aerial parts, giving a
good initial kill but allowing tillers to re-grow."
Mark Hemmant acknowledges that it's all too easy to be tempted
to spray set aside too early: especially when there's a lot of
growth and seed heads are emerging. For every flowering stem
in April and early May, he points out that it's important to
appreciate there will be many more tillers still in the less
vulnerable stem extension phase. Equally, he explains that seeds
in early emerging ears commonly take a good six weeks to mature,
so there is no rush to spray them.
"The best time to spray grass weeds is once all the ears
are fully emerged but while the seed heads and leaves are still
green," he insists. "With annuals like black-grass,
brome and rye-grass this varies from mid-May to early June. With
common couch, onion couch and other perennials it's likely to
be later in June or even into early July, depending on the season.
"Spraying in hot weather should be avoided as weed glyphosate
translocation can be restricted under these conditions," he
adds. "With light intensity also important in governing
herbicide movement in the plant, spraying in the morning is always
better than later in the day."
For the most cost-effective volunteer cereal and annual grass
weed control, Mark Hemmant recommends a single 2.4 litre/ha application
of Roundup Ultra, with higher rates for couch and other perennials.
He suggests adding the specialist adjuvant, Companion Gold to
the tank prior to the glyphosate to reduce spray drift as well
as maximising herbicide efficacy, stressing that boom height,
forward speed, spray pressure and nozzle choice must also be
spot-on for the most effective spray targeting.
Where volunteer cereal or grass weed growth is excessive, Mr
Hemmant accepts that two glyphosate applications may be required
- one before the main stem extension phase in late April to mid-May
and the other at full ear emergence in June/July. In most cases,
however, he considers a single application will be quite effective
enough: providing, of course, the spray timing is right.
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