It’s been a tough summer in parts of Ohio to do anything on a timely schedule and there are some weedy fields. The best advice for big weeds in full-season soybeans is to increase rates and the complexity of POST herbicide applications, while still adhering to cutoffs for the application of certain herbicides as much as possible.
Dicamba products, XtendiMax, Engenia, and Tavium, cannot legally be applied to Xtend and XtendiFlex soybeans after June 30. This cutoff date pertains to use in double-crop soybeans also. If you are planning on planting Xtend or XtendiFlex soybeans in double-crop fields and using dicamba as a burndown, apply before Friday.
There isn’t a cutoff date for most other POST soybean herbicides – it’s based on either crop stage (R1) or days before harvest.
Double crop soybeans usually need some type of weed control program, although how weedy they get depends upon weeds surviving down in the wheat that can take off once they receive light; how much rain we get in July, which drives additional weed emergence and rate of soybean growth; and how fast the soybeans grow and develop a canopy.
Control can occur via the use of preplant / preemergence burndown herbicides, followed by POST as needed. It’s also possible to accomplish this with one early POST application in Enlist soybeans, using Enlist Duo or a combination of Enlist One with glyphosate or glufosinate. And also in LLGT27 soybeans with a combination of glyphosate and glufosinate.
Herbicides need to address marestail in many fields, which is often lurking in the wheat ready to regrow. Marestail that are taller and get cut off by the combine will be more difficult to control than the smaller intact ones below the cutter bar. Herbicide options vary depending upon the weeds and what type of soybeans are planted.
It is possible to include residual herbicides with a PRE burndown treatment, but their value in this situation is questionable. Residual herbicides with long recrop intervals to corn should be avoided.
POST options in double-crop include glufosinate, glyphosate, Enlist One/Duo, and conventional herbicides, depending upon the type of soybean planted. One caution here is to avoid excessive injury to soybeans that slows growth and development since this is likely to reduce yield due to the short season.
Weed emergence is reduced and variable in July compared with May and June. Where burndown herbicides are used, but there is still a need for POST herbicides to control a flush of late-emerging weeds, consider reduced rates. Research we conducted back in the 1990s demonstrated that weeds up to 2 inches tall can usually be controlled with half of a typical labeled rate.
When soybeans were planted in early June, the single application of a half-rate provided adequate control, versus early May when a second application was needed. So this should be a suitable approach for double-crop soybeans. Just be sure to start with an effective burndown at planting, and apply when weeds are well within the 2-inch size.
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