Farms.com Home   News

The Fall Advantage of Kochia Control

The Fall Advantage of Kochia Control

By Gared Shaffer

Kochia in South Dakota

 

Kochia is a problem in row crops in north central South Dakota. New post-emergent options in corn and soybean have helped alleviate kochia competition from many fields, but these herbicide options shouldn’t be completely relied upon for a long-term plan for control. One option is to use a soil residual herbicide applied in the fall on fields that will be planted the following year to cash crops, such as corn or soybeans. The weather in parts of South Dakota can limit the opportunity to fully activate pre-herbicides applied before planting in the spring or limit access to wet areas due to an overabundance of moisture. This opens the door for using herbicides in the fall to control, not only winter annuals and biennials, but also give the advantage over early emerging summer annual weeds like kochia.

Fall-Applied Herbicide Options

Herbicide active ingredients that could be applied in fall before corn would include atrazine, flumioxazin, flumioxazin+pyroxasulfone, pyroxasulfone, s-metolachlor, acetochlor or a combination of these. Herbicide active ingredients that could be applied in fall before soybean would include flumioxazin, pendimethalin, s-metolachlor, dimethenamid-p, pyroxasulfone, sulfentrazone, saflufenacil, dimethenamid or a combination of these products. With each of these products, make sure to pay attention to environmental conditions required for application as specified in the label. These products can be applied across most years and situations right after fall harvest.

Source : sdstate.edu

Trending Video

Hay As A Cash Crop Panel Discussion

Video: Hay As A Cash Crop Panel Discussion

For producers looking to get into the commercial market in Ontario, there are several avenues. Our Forage Focus panel discussed some of those options.

The panel includes: Mark Horst of Marcrest Manufacturing, Fritz Trauttmansdorff from Ontario Hay and Forage Co-operative Inc, Chris Martin from Marhaven Agri and Chinook Hay Systems, James Fisher from The Hay Press Company, and Jaye Aitkins from Agricultural Credit Corporation. It was moderated by Christine O'Reilly from OMAFA.