Holy cow last august I should’ve loaded a van trailer of 2.5s and shipped them to your guys market. Yes roundup was high but 70-80 bucks?? We were 32/gal branded roundup 24 generic. Now we are 13.50 branded and 14 generic with Bayer cornering the market on the way down! 24D, dicamba, and many other staples are tanking so this fall and next year should be good. Price correction coming with glyphosate though likely to stabilize in the 16-20 dollar range.
Yes these prices are more in line with folks that have a restricted use license for pesticide use. A fellow that is planting say oats on his acreage even its small food plots could be considered winter grazing for their hand full of goats.Holy cow last august I should’ve loaded a van trailer of 2.5s and shipped them to your guys market. Yes roundup was high but 70-80 bucks?? We were 32/gal branded roundup 24 generic. Now we are 13.50 branded and 14 generic with Bayer cornering the market on the way down! 24D, dicamba, and many other staples are tanking so this fall and next year should be good. Price correction coming with glyphosate though likely to stabilize in the 16-20 dollar range.
How hard are said licenses to obtain? The thought crossed my mind as it wouldn't be horrible to be able to get atrazine for sorghum or switchgrass or have paraquat to rid myself of horsetail..Yes these prices are more in line with folks that have a restricted use license for pesticide use.
It depends upon the state. In Arkansas, our State Plant board is the regulatory agency for it. You can pay like $25 I think it is, sit through a 1-2 hour training and it’s good for 3-5 years. You can obtain one as long as you are engaged in commercial agriculture. Selling hay, vegetable crops like a truck stand, any row crop, or animal production.How hard are said licenses to obtain? The thought crossed my mind as it wouldn't be horrible to be able to get atrazine for sorghum or switchgrass or have paraquat to rid myself of horsetail..
Thanks, that seems to align with my recollection. The agriculture part might be the challenge. The emerging weed that might need attention if bringing pH up doesn't do the trick is horsetail, not to be confused with marestail.It depends upon the state. In Arkansas, our State Plant board is the regulatory agency for it. You can pay like $25 I think it is, sit through a 1-2 hour training and it’s good for 3-5 years. You can obtain one as long as you are engaged in commercial agriculture. Selling hay, vegetable crops like a truck stand, any row crop, or animal production.
Dicamba is your best bet on horseweed/marestail
Thanks, that seems to align with my recollection. The agriculture part might be the challenge. The emerging weed that might need attention if bringing pH up doesn't do the trick is horsetail, not to be confused with marestail
Gotcha. Might have to get creative with your description of commercial productionThanks, that seems to align with my recollection. The agriculture part might be the challenge. The emerging weed that might need attention if bringing pH up doesn't do the trick is horsetail, not to be confused with marestail.
Central Montana, we sell to guys who have yards to spray to 20k acre farms. Most co-ops or private retailers will be cheaper than big box stores.Huh? Where abouts is this reality? for joe schmoe food plotter even?
Horsetail I’ve had best luck with glyphosate and a silicon surfactant.