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BOLTON, DUBLIN,
BEEF
FARMERS'
FORUM
THE LATEST NEWS AND
VIEWS ON FARMING
/
“If problem weeda came
up with your corn again thia
season, it’s not too late to do
something about them!’’
That timely advice is now
being offered by crop
specialists to corn growers
whose fields are beginning to
show signs of soil thieves like
panicum, cheatgraas,
crabgrass, nutsedge,
morningglory anu green briar.
Why are these grasses
considered more of a problem
than others? Because, until
recently, it was just about
impossible to effectively
control them.
Take fall panicum, for
instance.
Since it generally shows up
late in the season, panicum
can be easily overlooked until
it makes its presence felt by
stealing moisture and soil
nutrients from an otherwise
healthy crop. And, unless it’s
controlled, panicum can get
thick enough by harvest time
to stop a picker in its tracks.
But how can you stop
panicum and other problem
weeds in their tracks?
For several reasons,
cultivation alone is not
recommended. Serious
infestations, for example, can
require repeated cultivations
for even minimal control,
costing growers time they can
ill afford. What’s more, if
weather keeps your cultivator
out of the field you may
wind up with little or no
control at all.
As an alternative, crop
specialists advise that
threatened crops be treated
with a second, post-directed
herbicide like Evik
(ametryne), which was
designed for the quick and
effective knock-down of
problem weeds. Such a
herbicide can also rescue corn
from a broad spectrum of
weeds earlier herbicides
missed because of poor
application or environmental
conditions. It will also slow
down Johnsongrass
infestations.
Judging from last year's
field results, post-directed
herbicides not only work, but
have arrived not a moment
too soon. As one grower put
it: “You just can’t grow corn
in the same field as problem
grasses and expect to harvest
a profitable crop!”
Reward:
In Georgia, it's buffalo i
grass.
In the Carolines, it’s
partridge peas.
:||li
These colorfully named
weeds have something in
common. Wherever they grow
they’re considered a problem.
Why? Because until
recently, it was almost
impossible to control them.
Along with cheatgrass,
crabgrass, nutsedge, and
morningglory these crop
robbers resist even the most
carefully planned cultivation
program.
In fact, repeated
cultivations at best offer
only minimal control over
them, or no control at all if
bad weather keeps the
cultivator out of the field.
What’s more, the practice
costs growers time and
money they can ill afford.
What,then, is the answer to
the problem weed problem?
According to an increasing
number of crop specialists
and growers, the solution is
to treat threatened crops with
a second, post-directed
herbicide like Evik
(ametryne), which wak
designed for the quick and
effective knockdown of
problem weeds. Such a
herbicide can also rescue
crops from a broad spectrum
of other weeds earlier
herbicides missed because of
poor application or
environmental conditions.
All of which adds up to the
happy fact that if problem
weeds came up with your
crops again this season, it’s
still not too late to do
something about them.
Judging from last year’s
field results, post-directed
herbicides not only work, but
have arrived not a moment
too soon. As one grower put
it: “You just can’t grow crops
in the same field as problem
grasses and expect to harvest
a profitable yield.”