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Docks in reseed
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<blockquote data-quote="milkloss" data-source="post: 6453060" data-attributes="member: 56"><p>Yes. I’ve done a fair few acres with squire ultra. Nearly every time I wished I’d used something with a little more kick. In quite a few fields it sorted the docks but not a clean kill and many grew back from a blackened root even if they looked a little stunted so I had to go over with mcpa just to finish them off a month after silaging.</p><p></p><p>The squire is like a pause button on them and overtime the plant/root just rots away but as soon as they cut damaged or cut they will grow again if it’s before the root is completely dead. I’ve left some for six weeks before and a fair few came back from the dead, these weren’t new germinated seeds either. Half the root was black and you could see the new shoots came from a small sliver of yellow root that was left. All tried over a few different years/conditions.</p><p></p><p>Just my experience explained as best I can.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="milkloss, post: 6453060, member: 56"] Yes. I’ve done a fair few acres with squire ultra. Nearly every time I wished I’d used something with a little more kick. In quite a few fields it sorted the docks but not a clean kill and many grew back from a blackened root even if they looked a little stunted so I had to go over with mcpa just to finish them off a month after silaging. The squire is like a pause button on them and overtime the plant/root just rots away but as soon as they cut damaged or cut they will grow again if it’s before the root is completely dead. I’ve left some for six weeks before and a fair few came back from the dead, these weren’t new germinated seeds either. Half the root was black and you could see the new shoots came from a small sliver of yellow root that was left. All tried over a few different years/conditions. Just my experience explained as best I can. [/QUOTE]
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