Direct Driller Magazine Issue 15

Page 8

BLACKGRASS CONTROL ARE YOU USING ENOUGH DIHYDROGEN MONOXIDE? Written by James Warne form Soil First Farming

Dihydrogen Monoxide or DHMO has been used for years to improve the distribution and performance of soil acting residual herbicides along with other uses such as a solvent, coolant, and used extensively as a fire retardant. It is critical for life, but deadly if too much is imbibed. You’ve probably heard of DHMO by its more common name – water.

conducted using twin flange fan nozzles (forward and back), none of those expensive air induction or ‘product’ type nozzles. Spray pattern was fine, 3 bar pressure and a moderately low forward speed of 10km/h, (trial results below).

there will always be a little seed which germinates from depth, a legacy of historical cultivation. With the seed on the surface it is now in better place to be controlled with actives such as flufenacet (FFT) and pendimethalin (PDM). These two key actives

The slightly flippant tone of the opening paragraph belies a message of real importance when it comes to simple and practical advice on the use of soil residual chemistry. The real message is if you want greater efficacy from your herbicide spend, use more water. This year has seen, in many areas, a massive seed return from the common grassweeds, brome, blackgrass, ryegrass etc. The last two autumns have also proved to be very tricky for crop establishment, both of which may combine into the perfect storm of earlier drilling and large seed banks ready to germinate. Trial work (by Agrovista) reveals that pre-em herbicide efficacy can be improved by the addition of more water. At 100l/ha a programme (see graph below) using DFF/FFT/PDM mix achieved just 50% control of blackgrass, But the same programme with 300l/ha water achieved over 90% control. Can you afford to ignore this evidence? DFF & FFT costs in the region of £20/ha at full rate, Pendimethalin is in the region of £20/ha. Prosulfocarb at recommended rate is circa £30/ha. An extra 200l/ha of water costs £0.4/ ha. To nearly double your blackgrass control. Of course, it’s not quite that straightforward. The above trial was 8 DIRECT DRILLER MAGAZINE

Just to be clear the graph above is showing that to achieve above 95% control of blackgrass use 300 litres of water, with forward & backward facing flat fans nozzles at a forward speed of 10 kph. Research by Stephen Moss et al has shown that in most situations a minimum of 95% control is required to reduce seed return. Those of you who are BASE – UK members also have the privilege of being able to watch Chris Martin’s excellent presentation of the correct choice of sprayer nozzle for different situations. Those who are following a Conservation Agriculture strategy will hopefully have resisted the urge to do a little light surface cultivation and will now have all the weed seed on the surface. Excepting the fact that

provide the backbone of many preemergence herbicide stacks and are probably the most cost effective too. They are primarily taken up by the roots of the germinating grass weeds. Therefore the roots of the blackgrass plants have to come into contact with the herbicide to be taken up and be effective. If the weed seed is emerging from depth the germinating seed roots are very unlikely to encounter the active ingredient and can happily push its cotyledon through the layer of herbicide on the soil surface without harm. Combine this strategy with spring cropping, wider rotations, more broadleaved cropping etc and you should find that grass weeds become less problematic year-on-year.

ISSUE 15 | OCTOBER 2021


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Articles inside

Farmer Focus - Chris Hollingsworth

4min
page 96

Where to Buy

3min
pages 94-95

What do you Read?

9min
pages 97-100

The Plant Microbiome

5min
pages 92-93

Practical Soil Biology

6min
pages 90-91

Does Grazing effect Crop Yields

7min
pages 88-89

Miscanthus Finance

2min
page 87

What can you Control

4min
page 80

The Unlevel Playing Field of Grain

7min
pages 78-79

Farmer Focus - David White

5min
pages 72-73

6 Steps to Successful Research

18min
pages 62-67

Help Preserve Ancient Meadows

5min
pages 68-71

Industrial Hemp

11min
pages 58-61

Proposing a Solution

9min
pages 54-57

Impressive Yields from new Varieties

5min
pages 52-53

Groundswell 2021

15min
pages 32-39

Getting Paid for Carbon

11min
pages 26-29

What we can't see

17min
pages 18-23

Solid Science into Biological Farming

10min
pages 13-17

Farmer Focus - John Pawsey

6min
pages 24-25

Agroforestry: Learning from four Pioneers

11min
pages 9-12

Featured Farmer - Ed Reynolds

6min
pages 6-7

Farmer Focus - Clive Bailye

6min
pages 30-31

Blackgrass Control

3min
page 8
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