Improve desiccation efficiency
Desiccation of OSR will be the preferred pre-harvest management option in most cases (swathing
is perhaps more appropriate on exposed sites). Glyphosate is the cheapest option for desiccation
but remember that it cannot be used on seed crops (or crops saved for seed). Glyphosate is not
recommended if stems are heavily diseased or stems are broken or chinked; or where there is
secondary regrowth of the crop. In these cases, or where crops are ripening unevenly, diquat is the
preferred option.
For both products follow label guidance on timings and water volumes and observe harvest
intervals. While diquat is best applied at dusk (to allow it to be distributed throughout the plant
prior to being activated by light), glyphosate is best applied in the morning as efficacy can be
impaired if applied at dusk.
Efficacy of both products can be enhanced by adding Companion Gold, which has full label
approval for use as an adjuvant with glyphosate and diquat for oilseed rape desiccation and offers
growers the unique combination of improved desiccant efficacy, yield improvement (by reducing pod
shatter) and drift reduction. The reduction of spray drift in OSR is particularly important, given
the height of the spray boom when
desiccating OSR, and the potential damage to other crops and non-target areas (eg field
margins) caused by spray drift.
Early maturing rape varieties give a distinct advantage to farmers, allowing them to finish
their rape harvest before the wheat harvest starts and giving more time for stale seedbeds for weed
control and optimising drilling dates of following crops, says Mike Mann of breeders DSV. “Primus,
Climber and Record are designed to appeal to a wide range of farmers, being short and stiff
strawed, but without being semi dwarf and sacrificing yield. They all deliver high gross output and
are early flowering and early maturing – as early as Excalibur, but with more seed and oil yield!”
Mike continues. “None of these three made it into Recommended List trials
as very early maturity means they are disadvantaged when
trials are all cut at the same time. On farm this isn’t an issue, as growers cut when the crop
is ready. We have a few hundred hectares of Primus in the ground now and Climber and Record are in
several private trials, as well as being available in limited quantities to a few farmers last
year. Growers have already noted all the positive attributes of this type of variety.”