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Arable Farming
Cropping
Wild oats in Spring Barley
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<blockquote data-quote="Romeogolf" data-source="post: 7023099" data-attributes="member: 60028"><p>Crop was drilled 30 of March - 2nd April, Axial pro applied 7th May as per photograph. [ATTACH]891990[/ATTACH]</p><p>At this timing, I had enough plants to spray, but also am aware of WO germinating after the 7th which is arguably unavoidable. Any earlier and I would have missed more. The bulk of them, however, would have made contact with the Axial, the ones that germinated after spraying are noticeably smaller and contribute far less to the population.</p><p></p><p>I’m not looking to sack my agronomist, as the rate prescribed was agreed by us both and has proven to be a reliable rate in other scenarios.</p><p></p><p>I am asking to see if anyone else has an opinion on the rate, or the strange growing year we’ve had and the implications they’ve experienced on their crops in a similar situation due to this.</p><p></p><p>Every day is a school day for me.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Romeogolf, post: 7023099, member: 60028"] Crop was drilled 30 of March - 2nd April, Axial pro applied 7th May as per photograph. [ATTACH]891990[/ATTACH] At this timing, I had enough plants to spray, but also am aware of WO germinating after the 7th which is arguably unavoidable. Any earlier and I would have missed more. The bulk of them, however, would have made contact with the Axial, the ones that germinated after spraying are noticeably smaller and contribute far less to the population. I’m not looking to sack my agronomist, as the rate prescribed was agreed by us both and has proven to be a reliable rate in other scenarios. I am asking to see if anyone else has an opinion on the rate, or the strange growing year we’ve had and the implications they’ve experienced on their crops in a similar situation due to this. Every day is a school day for me. [/QUOTE]
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Arable Farming
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Wild oats in Spring Barley
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