Good Fruit Grower

April 15

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"We like to change up the products we use and have both residual products and contact products in the orchard." —Tim Smith The following year, a combination of two different herbicides should be used in the spring, to avoid resistance development. "There are weeds that have become resistant to every herbicide class we have had in the past," Smith said. "A lot of it had to do with reliance on a single herbicide every year." The newer herbicides are safer to trees and the environment, Smith said, though they are more expensive. With the older herbicides, such as Simazine, Diuron, and Terbacil, growers had to take care when applying them; the older herbicides can be taken up by tree roots. High rates can injure trees. Newer pesticides are not picked up by tree roots, he said. Another advantage is that they can be used in all tree fruits, including stone fruits, which Simazine could not. Spring herbicides need to be applied before the weeds grow out of control, so the grower needs to be vigilant and have the weed sprayer ready to go, Smith said. Conyza canadensis (horseweed or marestail) is a particularly difficult species to control because it is resistant to many herbicides and it can grow six feet tall. "If it gets six inches tall, you've lost it," Smith said. "It's best to get it when it's smaller than a 50-cent piece. You have to get ahead of it." Test the weed sprayer Often, the weed sprayer is the least-maintained piece of equipment on the entire orchard, because it can look like it's doing a good job, even if it isn't, Smith has found. If the herbicide is not applied evenly, you'll have strips in the orchard where more herbicide than necessary is applied, which is a waste of money. There will also be strips with insufficient herbicide where the weeds break through. "Your weed control is no better than the least rate you put on," Smith warned. The fastest way to test a weed sprayer is to fill it with water and spray a 20-foot section of pavement or driveway. Then, watch the water dry. If it dries fairly evenly, the sprayer is probably doing a good job, but if some parts dry earlier or later, it is not applying the spray evenly. Check the height of the boom and make sure the nozzles are all putting out the same rate. One of the reasons weed control has become more important in mature as well as young orchards over the past couple of decades is the switch from large impact sprinklers to microsprinklers for irrigation, Smith said. Most of the new sprinklers are only 12 to 18 inches above the ground and don't put out a strong stream of water that can force its way through the weeds. In a high-density orchard, there can be enough interference by weeds and tree trunks to create dry spots on the ground. Incomplete coverage can be a problem when the trees are on dwarfing rootstocks and don't have large root systems to explore the soil. • DON'T LET WEEDS get away I t's particularly important to keep up with weed control in a young orchard because the weeds compete with the trees for water, nutrients, and light. It doesn't take long for a new planting to become dominated by weeds. Weeds are weeds for a reason—they're very competitive with other plants, while tree roots are not, points out Tim Smith, Washington State University extension educator. "Weed roots are in a class all of their own." Failing to control weeds can seriously affect young trees and cause them to runt out to the point where they might not recover. It can take as little as two to three weeks for weeds to overwhelm young trees, by which time the weeds might be too large to control easily with herbicides. "You can't make one mistake if you want your orchard to grow optimally," Smith said. Weeds grow faster (and grow bigger before setting seed) earlier in the season—in May and June—than they do later in the summer. "If you're busy with cherry harvest and you're not paying attention to your weeds and all of your tractors are hauling cherry bins around, you can get behind very quickly," Smith warned. Glyphosate is difficult to use during the year of establishment because if it touches green bark, it can damage the tree beyond repair. Other contact herbicides can be used, however. Smith recommends painting the trunks of young trees with white latex paint to protect them from both herbicides and heat damage. Grow tubes can help protect the trees, though weeds sometimes grow inside the tubes. —G. Warner "If it gets six inches tall, you've lost it." www.goodfruit.com —Tim Smith GOOD FRUIT GROWER April 15, 2013 17

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