Canola Council: Spray window closing

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 14, 2012

Rain has set back weed spraying. Early canola crops are near the end of their spray windows, even though some fields have not received a first pass and some fields got a first pass but need a second.

Label application windows:

Glyphosate: Anytime up to and including the 6-leaf stage of canola.
Liberty: Cotyledon stage up to the early bolting stage of canola.
Odyssey/Absolute: 2- to 6-leaf stage of canola.

Herbicides applied after the approved crop stage could cause early flowers to be aborted. Click here to learn how. Growers are advised to assess what will create the greater losses — weed competition or loss of the first set of flowers? Canola typically produces more flowers than it can support. The plant can produce more flowers to compensate for early flowers that were lost, provided stress later in the flowering period does not limit this ability.

Read Also

Bill Biligetu, forage crop breeder at the University of Saskatchewan, studies the purple flowers found in the alfalfa plots at Ag in Motion, a farm show held July 15-17 near Langham, Sask. Biligetu is hoping to design an alfalfa variety with more tolerance to drought. Photo: Robert Arnason

Research focuses on drought tolerant alfalfa

Exotic alfalfa varieties that produce white, blue, cream and yellow flowers are being looked at by plant breeders to improve the crop’s drought tolerance.

Aerial application may be required to spray within the application window if fields are too wet for the ground rig. Avoiding ruts is an additional benefit. Click here for aerial spraying tips. Note that Centurion has received emergency registration for aerial application on canola for 2012. For more information, click your province for a link to your guide to crop protection: Alberta SaskatchewanManitoba

Minimize ruts with ground rigs. If you plan to use the field sprayer, wider tires and lower tire pressures can improve sprayer flotation and reduce rut depth. If the operator doesn’t have time to switch tires, make ruts parallel with the intended direction of travel for the swather and combine so growers can keep up their harvest speed.

For more canola production issues visit www.canolawatch.org

explore

Stories from our other publications