Planning for your summer tree nut weed control

Written by: Kurt Hembree, UCCE Farm Advisor, Fresno County Winter weeds were abundant this year, thanks to the high amount of rainfall we had. Hopefully you found time between storms and were able to get into your orchards and treat for weeds. Given moist soil conditions and warming temperatures close at hand, summer weed growth is also expected to be high. So, are you ready to go with your summer weed control program? Hopefully you already know what weeds you’ll be up against. If not, look to see if there are new ones emerging in recently-watered orchards or after the last rainfall. Note specific weeds so herbicide(s) can be selected accordingly. When it comes to herbicide selection, make sure you’re using products that are effective against your specific weeds, which often vary from field to field. Also, select herbicides and rates that are appropriate for the soil type; lower rates of preemergent products are often needed on sandier soils than heavier soils. Consider using sequential treatments where appropriate if rainfall occurs in April, which can help extend control through summer. Remember to add postemergent products to the tank if weeds are already up and growing when you treat. If glyphosate-resistant horseweed, hairy fleabane, junglerice, or ryegrass are present, and you still want to use Roundup or a similar material, be sure to add another burn-down material that is effective on those weeds. Combining Treevix or Rely 280, Lifeline, or similar product with Roundup has worked well on these and a wide variety of weeds. Be sure to treat when the weeds are small for optimum control. Don’t wait to spray when weeds are large, droughty, or dense, or herbicide coverage and performance may suffer. Use spray tips, a spray volume, and spray pressure that adequately wets the weeds, while minimizes

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Dormant Weed Control in Tree Nut Crops 2012-2013

 Written by Mick Canevari and Brent Holtz, UCCE San Joaquin. Weeds have a tremendous capacity to spread within an orchard.  The first line of defense is  identifying the weeds you need to control, and selecting the best herbicides or cultural practices to control those weeds.  If you use the same herbicide(s) each year, a shift to tolerant weed species will ultimately take over and a loss of herbicide effectiveness will occur.  Alternating products with different modes of action at least every couple years will improve results and insure herbicides long term viability.  The UCIPM web site has charts that show which weeds are controlled by what herbicides, and an excellent weed photo gallery that includes many weed species commonly found in California for easy identification and reference http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/.      

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