Practical recommendations – Sulky Unidrill W1000T User Manual

Page 65

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Practical recommendations

Practical recommendations

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DEALING WITH WEEDS

Conservation tillage must exclusively be kept to clean fields.

Perennial weeds, in particular, must be kept under control during the previous seasons.

Weeds must be dealt with within the framework of crop rotation.

Alternate cereal and dicotyledonous plant crops (peas, rape, beetroot etc.) as well as winter and spring crops. Dicotyledonous crops

give an opportunity to efficiently get rid of graminae; on the other hand, cereal crops allow efficient action to be taken against

dicotyledonous plants.

Sow stale seed beds during catch-crop periods to get rid of yearly weeds and regrowths.

As soon as the combine harvester has passed, a homogeneous, superficial and rolled "bed" of seeds must be prepared, using fine soil,

so that the weed seeds emerge as regularly and completely as possible. One week before sowing, destroy the emerged plants by

means of mechanical tillage or total non carry-over herbicide, such as glyphosate or sulfosate. Aim to have no weeds at all at the time

of sowing.

Avoid sowing too early in order to improve the stale seed bed's efficiency.

The longer the catch-crop period, the more efficient weeding will be. Sow trashy fields last. Trust the quick efficiency and the

emergence quality of the UNIDRILL to enable you to sow at the usual dates, without any risks.

As soon as the sowing is finished, keep clean and strong crops growing.

Use clean seeds that are free of weeds and have a high germinal power. The seeds must be placed to obtain a fast and grouped

growth, to create a culture that will be able to compete with weeds.

Use a seed drill that causes little disturbance of the soil, such as the UNIDRILL.

The UNIDRILL works exclusively in the sowing line, which avoids seeds that escaped the stale seed bed emerging. Prefer wide spacing

between rows, such as that of the Unidrill (16.6 cm). Use the seed drills' rear harrow only when necessary.

Watch for the evolution of the flora during the cultures’ growth period.

With conservation tillage, the usual weeds do not appear in the same quantities or at the same dates; additionally, new species may

appear. Prepare for this evolution by improving your botanical knowledge. Every week while the crops are growing, walk through the

fields, moving into plots of land in a continuous series of "Ws", identifying plants and their respective development; write any

observations down and trace the history of each plot of land.

Use herbicides of new chemical categories every year.

Clean borders, fallows and crops before the heading.

Cut or shred weeds on embankments, in ditches and in fallows rather than treating them with total herbicide: some perennial plants

might not react to the product, and may then become difficult to get rid of. Some find it preferable to grow rye-grass on borders: it

chokes weeds and can easily be kept under control using a mower. During the season, destroy the remaining localised weed growth

spots using localised treatments, your usual pulverising machine, or by hand.

Avoid scattering weed seeds when harvesting.

Start harvesting the cleanest plots of land. In weed-infested plots, harvest the cleanest parts first. Clean the combine harvester well

after harvesting weed-infested land.

Ploughing is a last resort if the techniques above are not efficient enough to get rid of annual grass or dicotyledones.

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