Home / Canola Watch Newsletters / Canola Watch: CanoLAB Top 5 | Crop establishment quiz
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Click the image above to watch a recording from the Canola Council of Canada on soil tests and analysis.
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Canola Quiz – Crop establishment
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Three quick questions on weeds and insects to get you primed for uniform and vigorous canola crop emergence.
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What are the top 5 takeaways from CanoLAB 2024?
CanoLAB for Agronomists was in Alberta and Saskatchewan last week and wrapped up today in Manitoba. Here are five key takeaways from the disease-focused event:
1. Manage blackleg. Blackleg management can start at seeding with the new blackleg-protective seed treatments. Know your seed treatment and its capabilities. Later in the season, scout and cut stems to understand your current loss and future risk. 2. Identify verticillium stripe. The list of important canola diseases expands to four with the addition of verticillium stripe. Learn to identify it. 3. Don’t forget about clubroot. The top four list still includes clubroot, even though blackleg and verticillium stripe have more buzz right now. 4. Make a plan to assess sclerotinia stem rot risk. Fungicides are effective sclerotinia management tools, but timing is important. And economic return depends on a real risk of yield loss. Read the new Canola Digest article. 5. Use CCC resources. You are already a Canola Watch subscriber but perhaps you know others who should subscribe. We also have the Canola Encyclopedia, Canola Research Hub and other tools. Here’s a list.
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Have you inspected the drill openers?
Openers with sharp edges and limited wear work better to cut through residue, achieve consistent seed depth and provide the essential separation between seed and fertilizer. These benefits improve seed survival and crop uniformity, which improve the return on investment for seed. As we’ve said before, a canola crop with five to eight plants per square foot emerging uniformly is more competitive against weeds and insects.
Seeding tool pre-season inspection | Crop establishment and flea beetle management | Drill settings can help make canola crops more competitive against weeds.
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What do you think about early weed burnoff?
The first week of April may seem too early, and it probably is for most areas, but spraying well before seeding can be the right move in scenarios where weeds are growing – taking up moisture and nutrients – and could be quite large by seeding time.
Two notes:
- Tank mixing is essential, especially with glyphosate-resistant kochia. Never use glyphosate (Group 9) alone. With glyphosate-resistant kochia as the target, effective options ahead of canola include Group-6 bromoxynil and Group-27 topramezone. Certitude is the only Group 27 registered for use ahead of canola. And while known cases of Group-14-resistant kochia exist, Group-14 carfentrazone should still be effective in most cases. These mixes are also effective against the range of weeds in the pre-seed window. How to contain herbicide-resistant kochia.
- After a frost, wait for at least one night with a low of 5°C or warmer and one day of warm, sunny conditions. If heavy frost caused tissue damage to more than 40 per cent of weed leaf area, wait for new growth to show before spraying. If spraying was done more than 48 hours before a frost event, efficacy on living plants will be retained and the plant will continue to decline when it warms up again. Tips for better pre-seed burnoff results.
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Is salinity a frustration for you?
Soils with high levels of surface salts often produce poor crops, sometimes no crop. Kochia and other more saline-tolerant weeds move in. Simple steps to reduce losses are to stop applying nutrients to these areas (levels could be high due to chronically low performing crops) and stop seeding into areas where crop won’t grow. Then mow (don’t kill) those moisture-wicking weeds so they don’t set seed. More effective, but more costly, management steps are to plant the worst areas to saline-tolerant forages and/or use targeted tile drainage which, with adequate rainfall, will move salts lower in the soil profile. Salinity guide | Managing salinity with forages | Fix or set aside unprofitable acres
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Canola Community Connections
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Register for Keep it Clean’s 2024 Product Advisory Webinar Growers, agronomists, agri-retailers and other industry members are invited to join the Keep it Clean 2024 Product Advisory webinar on Thursday, April 25 at 11:00 a.m. CDT. The webinar will review potential market risks associated with certain crop protection products on some crop types and best practices to keep crops market-ready throughout the growing season. More information and registration.
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Read the Canola Research Hub blog The latest: Preparing for 2024: Canola disease recap
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Subscribe to SaskCanola’s texting service To receive weekly oilseed market outlook reports and canola agronomy resources, subscribe to SaskCanola’s texting service; sent 2-3 times per week by text depending on season and issues. You may unsubscribe at any time. Have questions for SaskCanola? Farmers can also text the number to initiate a two-way conversation with SaskCanola’s staff. Click here for details on how to subscribe.
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