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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Some general spray questions
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<blockquote data-quote="RiverHills" data-source="post: 1351203" data-attributes="member: 23963"><p>Read the label some chemicals and application are different. Grazon Next says</p><p>Grazing and Haying Restrictions: Do not harvest forage for hay </p><p>within 7 days of GrazonNext HL application. Cutting hay too soon after </p><p>spraying weeds can compromise the weed control. Wait 14 days prior </p><p>to cutting grass hay to allow for maximum herbicide activity.</p><p></p><p>I'm not an expert but 20 gallons gives better coverage. Most row crop farms use less just so they can run over more acres on a fill up. Here is what GrazoNext label says.</p><p>Ground Broadcast Application: Higher spray volumes (greater than </p><p>10 gallons per acre) generally provides better coverage and better control, </p><p>particularly in dense and/or tall foliage.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RiverHills, post: 1351203, member: 23963"] Read the label some chemicals and application are different. Grazon Next says Grazing and Haying Restrictions: Do not harvest forage for hay within 7 days of GrazonNext HL application. Cutting hay too soon after spraying weeds can compromise the weed control. Wait 14 days prior to cutting grass hay to allow for maximum herbicide activity. I'm not an expert but 20 gallons gives better coverage. Most row crop farms use less just so they can run over more acres on a fill up. Here is what GrazoNext label says. Ground Broadcast Application: Higher spray volumes (greater than 10 gallons per acre) generally provides better coverage and better control, particularly in dense and/or tall foliage. [/QUOTE]
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Some general spray questions
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