“Dicamba, in the 50 years that we’ve used it, has never been excellent on any of the pigweed species,” he explained. “It can be good, it can be very good, but it’s not excellent. It’s not as consistent.”
“Certainly with something like dicamba and waterhemp our recommendation of farmers is to treat very, very small weeds, but certainly go back in about 10-14 days and scout those treated fields. Look and see what the efficacy level has been because sometimes we can twist up some of these pigweed plants, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that they’re going to be completely controlled.”
It is possible for the weeds to recover, flower, and produce seed. And that, says Hager, is something to avoid.
Source: NAFB News Service