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The high price of supposedly free feed


Published on 04/12/2025


This season, thanks to results of a new trial, you can hopefully persuade them to see things a little differently.
 
They’ll be better off as a result, and so too
will their animals.

 
Nufarm technical specialist Sonja Vreugdenhil has some compelling data that clarifies in no uncertain terms the true cost of that perceived free feed.

 
She ran a dryland brassica trial in
Canterbury last season that included comparing the dry matter yield at maturity between swedes that were sprayed post emergence for early grass weed control, and those that weren’t.
 
Even she was surprised at the disparity
between the two.

 
“It really showed grass is the largest robber
of yield in a forage brassica crop. Prevailing weeds in the trial area were couch/twitch and perennial ryegrass, and they would not have covered more than 15% of ground area at the time of herbicide application.

 
“Yet the difference in crop yield between treated and untreated swedes was 50 per
cent, and grass weeds themselves made up only a small percentage of the untreated yield. Treated bulbs were the size of a person’s head, and untreated the size of your fist.”

 
The trial was sown in a high rainfall area
near the foothills in early November 2024, and yield was measured in April.
 
Weed control was applied to the treated
swedes when the crop was at the six true leaf stage, and comprised 3 litres per ha SeQuence, with Bonza Gold at 500 ml per100 litres of water.
 
Prestige was included for broadleaf control at the same time, tank mixed at 350 ml per ha.

 
As a way of demonstrating exactly what happens when grass is not controlled in forage brassicas, the trial was very successful.

 
“Sometimes it’s hard for farmers to visualize how much yield they can lose from what doesn’t seem like a lot of grass infestation in a young crop, especially when they often look at that grass and think of it
as free feed.

 
“So this is a great visual representation of the value of grass weed control. I worked out you would need 500 kg dry matter per
ha of extra yield to cover the cost of that herbicide application, which is not a lot in the context of a crop that yields 12-15 tonnes dry matter per ha.”

 
This work was done on winter brassicas, but the same principle holds true for summer brassicas too, she says.

 
Every day farmers hold off applying a grass
weed herbicide in affected crops can impact their yield.

 
“If they’re going to put a crop in, they need to look after it, or they will be disappointed when it comes to grazing.”

 
There’s another equally important reason to control grass weeds: they compete with the new pasture which usually follows forage crops.

 
“Once new pastures are sown, farmers do not have an opportunity to
control undesirable grass species.”

 
SeQuence is a selective herbicide registered for many spring-sown forage crops, including fodder and sugar beet, forage brassicas, chicory, plantain, lucerne, clovers and other legumes.

 
It contains the active ingredient clethodim
(Group 1) and is registered on 22 grassweeds, including ryegrasses, annual summer grasses, wild oats, cultivated couch and annual poa.

 
Best results come from applying SeQuence
when target grasses are actively growing. This only happens when soil moisture and temperature are at the right level to support growth, so it pays to be aware of how conditions are shaping up at the start of the season.

 
SeQuence must always be applied with Bonza Gold and may be tank mixed with Archer 750 (Group 4) or Prestige (Group 4)
if broadleaf weed control is also required in forage brassicas. Attack may be added to SeQuence when pest control is needed.





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