• Clean new equipment: Keep clubroot at bay

    April 4, 2012

    If you don't have clubroot, be sure any used or demo’d equipment you buy is clean before you bring it home. Clean equipment before it leaves the auction site or the farm it comes from. Also check that the transport truck is clean. As a precaution, you may want to pressure wash the equipment again when it gets to your…

  • Alternaria can make hailed pods brittle

    August 31, 2011

    Alternaria has infected the pods of many hailed crops. Keep watching these crops. When infected areas make up 50% or more of the crop, swathing early may be the best way to salvage the yield in those infected plants if a large proportion of pod surfaces are covered with the black spots. Read more to see photos of alternaria infection…

  • How to scout for clubroot

    August 10, 2011

    Growers are encouraged to examine strange disease patterns to see if clubroot has arrived on their farms…

  • Is that sclerotinia or blackleg?

    August 10, 2011

    Growers seeing stem lesions or pre-mature ripening should take a closer to identify the cause. There is a good chance it’s sclerotinia. But it could be blackleg. It’s important to identify the cause because it will help in management for next year…

  • Sclerotinia in an uneven crop: Consider a split application

    July 13, 2011

    The sclerotinia spray decision is more complicated for growers with canola stands that are thin, late or at multiple stages. Multi-stage and thin crops that have good yield potential and are fairly well advanced may benefit from a split fungicide application…

  • Hail can increase sclerotinia risk

    July 7, 2011

    Regrowth after hail may extend the flowering period, which also increases the sclerotinia stem rot risk. If yield potential is still high and if conditions favorable to sclerotinia stem rot persist, then a fungicide spray may pay off…

  • Did you walk your fields today?

    June 8, 2011

    Small and vulnerable canola plants face many threats during their first three weeks. The crop may need your protection to get through these stages with its top-end yield potential intact. Canola growers are encouraged to walk their fields a couple times a week — or more — until plants are firmly established and growing strong…

  • Protect canola at this most fragile stage

    June 1, 2011

    Canola is most fragile during the first 21 days after emergence. The small plants are highly susceptible to flea beetles, cutworms, seedling diseases, weed competition and various other threats. Scouting may be required every day for at-risk crops, especially if a threat such as flea beetles seems to be building. At a minimum get out to each field a couple…

  • Sclerotinia management: What is 20% flower?

    July 7, 2010

    Fungicide to protect the crop from sclerotinia stem rot infection must be applied to petals before infected petals start to drop into the canopy. Petal drop starts after 30% flower,……

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use. To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Privacy policy
Dismiss
Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use. To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Privacy policy
Dismiss