Resist early drilling temptation where black-grass threatens‏

Dry soils and slow black-grass emergence means growers must not rush into drilling winter crops
Dry soils and slow black-grass emergence means growers must not rush into drilling winter crops

Growers must hold-off drilling winter wheat on land affected by black-grass for at least another month or risk fire-fighting this pernicious weed for the rest of the season.

That is the warning from Hutchinsons technical manager Dick Neale who says many growers still fail to recognise the importance of delayed drilling in controlling black-grass.

All too often the temptation is to push ahead with autumn cultivations and drilling whenever conditions allow for fear of the weather changing and getting “caught out” later.

But high dormancy this autumn combined with dry soils in many southern and eastern areas means very little black-grass has yet emerged and drilling too early risks high levels of emergence within the crop, which will be harder to control and potentially exacerbate problems.

Mr Neale says: "Don’t be fooled. Although some growers who created stale seedbeds early, to the right specification and in moisture, have seen a good black-grass chit, the bulk of the population will not emerge until late September with a second major flush in the first week of October.

"If black-grass is a threat you can’t afford to drill before the 15th of October.

"Most soil will take two to three inches of rain with no problem and bring land back to the conditions required for a good seedbed creation and emergence.

"The best advice is to leave ground well alone and wait for black-grass to emerge.

"We’re only talking about delaying drilling on fields affected by black-grass, so you can still drill earlier elsewhere," Mr Neale says.

'Very different to last year'

Mr Neale warns this autumn is very different to last year, when seed return from the previous year was lower and soil conditions favoured good pre-emergence herbicide efficacy.

"But the weather this spring resulted in bad tiller control in a lot of places leading to high seed return, so the starting population for many growers has already been ramped up several times over."

For those debating whether to apply a pre-emergence herbicide where seedbed conditions remain very dry, Mr Neale points to trials that show the efficacy of residual chemistry is reduced in dry years and he reiterates the need to wait for soil conditions to improve before drilling.

"If you’re drilling into dry seedbeds during September, when most black-grass emerges, then you’ve already gone wrong."

He also advises avoiding winter cropping on the worst “red” black-grass fields, which should go into spring cropping to allow more time to reduce weed population pressure outside the crop and also introduce alternative forms of chemistry to help manage resistant populations.