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Airblast Spraying in Poor Conditions

By Jason Deveau, Application Technology Specialist, OMAFRA

For many airblast operators, the spring of 2019 has been very difficult. The frequency and duration of rain events has left limited opportunity for orchard sprays. Even then, the periods between rains are transitions between warm and moist conditions and cold fronts, which makes wind gusty and changeable. These same periods leave wet alleys prone to rutting and compaction, and conditions that favour spraying may also favour pollinator activity.

In response, applicators get frustrated. Some may be tempted to spray in sub-optimal conditions and risk drift thinking even a little coverage is better than none. But the adage that “there is no wasted fungicide spray” does not apply here. Some may disagree, but spraying in wet and high-wind situations:

The argument itself may be moot because the decision to spray is not strictly a consideration of economics, productivity, and risk tolerance. When environmental restrictions exist on a pesticide label they are inviolate. That is, they are not suggestions but legal requirements. Statements might include:

Technologies exist that extend the spray window, but they require long-term planning and may not be economical (or even completely proven). They are generally a combination of orchard architecture and sprayer design. Examples include:

Assuming the pesticide label does not prohibit application, there are adjustments that can improve coverage and reduce drift, but only marginally. These are compromises that sacrifice time, money, effort and/or the level of crop protection. Further, they are only intended for sprayers with towers (i.e. not axial sprayers):

The best advice is unpopular: Park the sprayer until conditions improve. Like hail, there are environmental factors that are out of the sprayer operator’s control. They are inconvenient and highly frustrating, but do not be tempted to takes risks on what might ultimately be poor coverage and accusations of pesticide drift.

 

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