I have never been brave enough either to spray my clover plots with Gly.
update on this plot.....
The 24DB did its job, plantain and thistles were eradicated. However it certainly stunted the clover also.
dead thistles....
View attachment 11837
dead plantain, and a dead thistle adjacent to it...
View attachment 11836
however you can see the clover is looking sick (pictures all taken march 31st). the next two pictures are each of a leaflet of apache arrowleaf clover, one is stunted severely. The second one is beautiful, it is in a plot that did not get sprayed.
View attachment 11838 View attachment 11839
The last picture is the plot yesterday....oats are doing wonderful, the crimson recovered, the arrowleaf never really recovered, but the ladino is healthy.
the clover mix was initially:
• 30% Crimson Clover
• 30% Ladino Grazing Clover
• 30% Arrowleaf Clover
• 10% Alfalfa
View attachment 11840
I will try to remember to update again at the end of the summer to see how the ladino is doing.
I've read that for pasture management of thistle a spring (rosette stage) spraying of 2-4d will do the trick. Is this not consistent with your guys's findings? I did a lot of spot spraying last summer but have some patches getting out of hand. Was planning on a 2-4d spraying this weekend...
You bet.^^^ thanks for the reply!
I would be surprised if you could kill it with just 2-4-d. The best I've seen on hard to kill broadleaf is Aquasweep. It is 2-4-d with triclopyr . The Triclopyr has geat root activity. Canada thistle isn't on the label but I have guys spraying it right now on thistle and it is real good on it. And it has an aquatics label if you have a pond with weeds. It kills bind weed and wild violets and their tuberous root systems are the toughest kind.I've read that for pasture management of thistle a spring (rosette stage) spraying of 2-4d will do the trick. Is this not consistent with your guys's findings? I did a lot of spot spraying last summer but have some patches getting out of hand. Was planning on a 2-4d spraying this weekend...
I looked on the Clopyralid label and I can't find anything that it's safe ON turnips or safe for follow up planting of turnips. It could be hidden in the label/directions and I just missed it.I would use the C3 as stated above. It is from the same family of herbicides as Milestone and Tordon. All three have soil residual and are deadly on thistle AND legumes. Labels usually state 12 to 18 months before you can put any clovers or beans back in. However C3 is the only one labeled to be safe for turnips, so as long as your fine with oats and turnips for 12 to 18 months C3 will solve your problem.
Thanks brother!Its well published that Clopyralid is used for broad leaf control for the brassicas family.
http://msdssearch.dow.com/Published...h=uk/pdfs/noreg/011-01895.pdf&fromPage=GetDoc
For the Allagare brand look under the Field Bioassay Instructions. It will list sugar beats as a Clopyralid tolerant plant.