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Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

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Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate. Is it possible to fight weeds effectively on small acreages in Utah?. What is a weed?. Any plant growing where you don’t want it. Are weeds bad? What function do weeds play in the environment? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Pasture Weed Control

Ralph E. Whitesides

Utah State University

Plants, Soils, and Climate

Page 2: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Is it possible to fight weeds effectively on small acreages in Utah?

Page 3: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

What is a weed?

Any plant growing where you don’t want it.

Are weeds bad?

What function do weeds play in the environment?

What are weeds telling us?

Page 4: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Why Worry About Weeds?

They are just plants. Right? Its not like you have a rampaging grizzly

in your garden. Right?

No!

Page 5: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Once weeds move in they stay. They multiply. Soon the unwanted and uninvited

guests have taken your land and won’t give it back without a fight!

Page 6: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

What is the first step?

Take inventory of property If you try to control weeds without a

game plan there is a good chance you won’t succeed.

Page 7: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

4 Golden Guidelines of Weed Control for Small Acreage

Properties

1. Know what you want to do with your property. (Why did you buy it in the first place?)

2. Promote healthy vegetation.

3. Implement good land use practices.

4. No one weed control method works alone.

Page 8: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

• Prevention

• Detection

• Control• Cultural

• Mechanical

• Biological

• Chemical

• Restoration

Weeds are best controlled through an integrated approach using several of the following methods

Page 9: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Two Working rules for controlling weeds in your pasture

“Prevention”

1. Prevent weeds in the first place

2. If you cannot do #1 everything else will be more work, more time, and more money. More of everything!

Page 10: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How practical is Rule #1?

Page 11: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How practical is Rule #1?

Where do weeds come from?

Page 12: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How practical is Rule #1?Where do weeds come from? (prevention)

1. Seed Bank in the soil

2. Irrigation Water

3. Off-site Feed – Hay

4. Bedding materials

5. Wind borne – animal borne (field bindweed seeds can survive 144 hrs in stomach of migrating birds)

6. Seed Mixtures

Page 13: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)

1. Management

2. Knowledge

3. Judgment

4. Experience

5. Work – Time – Money

6. More Work – Time – Money

7. Constant Work – Time – Money

Page 14: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)

What caused us to get weeds in the first place?

Page 15: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)

What caused us to get weeds in the first place?

The answer to that question will aid us in our work to control weeds.

Page 16: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)What caused us to get weeds in the first place?

The answer to that question will aid us in our work to control weeds.

Grazing Issues – Overgrazing, timing, wrong animals

Soil Issues – Fertility, salt, texture, etc

Water Issues – irrigation and natural precipitation, too much or too little

Seed mixture- not suited to environment

Page 17: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)

Cause: Improper grazing – treating the pasture as a corral instead of as a pasture.

Page 18: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pasture

How do we implement Rule #2? (control)

What is a Corral? What is a Pasture?

Page 19: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pastureWe may want something like this?

Page 20: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pastureThese may be more realistic.

Page 21: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your Pastures

“Detection”What am I trying to control? Identify the weed.

Grass – Broadleaf

Annual – Perennial

Edible – Poisonous

Spreading – Non-spreading

HOW DID IT GET TO BE A WEED?

Page 22: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pastures

Whatever caused the weed to become a problem or concern in the first place must be addressed to help you in controlling it.

Each potential solution is as individual as is the problem and the person wanting to solve it.

Page 23: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pastures

“Control”

General Guidelines:

• Proper irrigation and soil fertility

• Mowing to prevent from going to seed

• Spot spraying as soon as weeds are detected

• Monitoring the Pasture (high eyes to acre ratio)

Page 24: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Range and Range and Pasture Weed Pasture Weed ManagementManagement

Page 25: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Approved Herbicides 2,4-D / MCPA

Amber

Cimarron / Escort

Cimarron Max

Clarity / Banvel

Crossbow

Curtail

Garlon / Remedy

Grazon P+D

Journey

Milestone

Plateau

Redeem R&P

Roundup

Spike

Transline / Reclaim

Telar

Tordon

Transline

Weedmaster

Page 26: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Approved Herbicides 2,4-D / MCPA

Amber

CimarronCimarron / Escort

Cimarron MaxCimarron Max

Clarity / Banvel

Crossbow

Curtail

Garlon / Remedy

Grazon P+D

Journey

MilestoneMilestone

Plateau

Redeem R&P

Roundup

Spike

Transline / Reclaim

TelarTelar

Tordon

Transline

Weedmaster

Page 27: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Dyer’s WoadIsatis tinctoria

Page 28: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 29: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Perennial PepperweedLepidium latifolium

Page 30: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 31: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Hoary CressCardaria draba

Page 32: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 33: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Cimarron Metsulfuron (Escort renamed) Hoary cress, dyer’s woad, perennial

pepperweed, thistles, houndstongue Must add surfactant or COC No grazing restrictions Tall fescue and perennial ryegrasses are

sensitive (damage)

Page 34: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Cimarron Max Metsulfuron + dicamba + 2,4-D Ratio: 5 oz Part A + 2.5 gal Part B Greater weed spectrum controlled Must add surfactant or COC Dicamba’s grazing restrictions Tall fescue and perennial ryegrasses are

sensitive (damage)

Page 35: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Telar

Chlorsulfuron Hoary cress, dyer’s woad, perennial

pepperweed, thistles, houndstongue Must add surfactant or COC No grazing restrictions Tall fescue and perennial ryegrasses are

sensitive (damage)

Page 36: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Russian Knapweed Centaurea repens

Page 37: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 38: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Spotted KnapweedCentaurea maculosa

Page 39: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 40: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Yellow StarthistleCentaurea solstitialis

Page 41: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 42: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Milestone

Aminopyralid Knapweeds and thistles Weak on mustards Closely related to Tordon Not “Restricted-Use” Wildland and recreation sites

Page 43: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

MedusaheadTaeniatherum caput-medusae

Page 44: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate
Page 45: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Plateau Imazapic Winter annual grasses

Downy Brome Medusahead

Rangeland improvement Safe on most established

perennial grasses

Page 46: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Some poisonous weeds of pasture

Page 47: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

HoundstongueCynoglossum officinale

Page 48: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Houndstongue

Foothills, pastures, roadsides

Horses, cattle, sheep

Fresh (unpalatable) or in hay

Cummulative, may taint milk

Page 49: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Houndstongue(Symptoms)

Dullness, wandering

Increased pulse and respiration

Weakness, nervousness

Constipation or diarrhea

Death by liver hemorrhage

Page 50: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Houndstongue(Management)

Avoid contaminated hay

Digging / pulling

Escort (Cimmaron), Ally, Tordon,

Clarity (Banvel), 2,4-D

Page 51: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Poison HemlockConium maculatum

Page 52: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Poison Hemlock

Wet areas, disturbed sites

Sheep, cattle, horses, humans

Coniine and other alkaloids

4 to 8 oz sheep, 10 to 16 oz cow

Page 53: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Poison Hemlock(Symptoms)

Salivation, nervous trembling

Bloating, lack coordination

Pupil dilation, rapid pulse

Blue mouth lining

Respiratory paralysis, coma

Page 54: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Poison Hemlock(Symptoms - cont.)

Abortion Crooked calf disease

(same timing and effect as lupine)

Death in 2 to 3 hours Confused with wild edibles, has

caused death of children

Page 55: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Poison Hemlock(Management)

Animals normally avoid (fresh)

Do not cut in hay

2,4-D, Ally, Escort (Cimmaron), digging

Page 56: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Weed Control in Pastures

“Restoration”

Summary Thoughts-

• Fertilizer- 150 lbs/a split in 3 treatments (50+ 50+ 50 in April- July- September)

• Irrigation- improve distribution and training

• Spot treat weeds- use a backpack or hand held sprayer, and treat problem areas (especially fence lines on a regular basis)

Page 57: Pasture Weed Control Ralph E. Whitesides Utah State University Plants, Soils, and Climate

Controlling weeds in your pastures

Questions?