Rice Damage?
- torch
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Rice Damage?
They claim its roundup but I am not sure. Lots of acres dying. Anyone else having these problems?
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- timberjack
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I can't speak about rice but I know my corn took a beating after that last big rain we had. It stayed submerged for a day and a half...........it's looking a little better now and I'm keeping my fingers crossed. I wanted to plant tropical corn and mix it up with some millets and different things but decided to go with RR corn and beans 'cause everybody around me is spraying roundup. That drift is for real, I've got 15 acres planted and don't have a sprig of grass in it and I haven't sprayed it.



- timberjack
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LOTS of roundup drift, Torch. Especially in your area...... JEEZ
. Someone has a big problem on their hands. Lot hit around Longshot area also. We have about 3000 acres hit, another consultant has around 4000 south of us... one 1100 acre block, smoked to the ground. Now alot of rice dying from drought. Only 7 days from a drought when it comes to crops. Rice roots are in the dry , 3 inches down.

Sound familiar?
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- Boogerden Boy
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we've got some that's been hit. some of it is dead, but most of it has a burnt tip on it. Pretty sure we know where it came from too. Some beans(not ours) were sprayed a week or so ago. half of Our bean field right next to it prolly won't even havr to be sprayed cause their drift killed the grass for us.
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cant really see the growers complaining....I mean land leveled fields among other things equals no more tree lines=higher sustained winds=faster dry times + chemical drift
I understand to some degree the mentallity behind clearcutting tree lines and brush lines from a growers standpoint but from an environmental standpoint it doesnt make a lot of sense
now we are experiencing from what you guys are saying the negative reprucussions of no natural barriers...ie chemical drift further and faster and dry times quicker
hope all turns out well...maybe after this year some of our growers will reconsider those natural buffers it certainly improves the landscape, the animals certainly will appreciate it and maybe it will help solve some of the problems you guys are describing
the doc
I understand to some degree the mentallity behind clearcutting tree lines and brush lines from a growers standpoint but from an environmental standpoint it doesnt make a lot of sense
now we are experiencing from what you guys are saying the negative reprucussions of no natural barriers...ie chemical drift further and faster and dry times quicker
hope all turns out well...maybe after this year some of our growers will reconsider those natural buffers it certainly improves the landscape, the animals certainly will appreciate it and maybe it will help solve some of the problems you guys are describing
the doc
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Always been a problem in early spring with roundup drift. Usually it's corn that gets killed. Since rice and corn are the first to be planted, and there is a good bit of burndown going out at the same time, and the wind is galing at that time of year, you usually hear about it early on.
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- Po Monkey Lounger
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Sounds like some folks need a good lawyer.
I can represent either side --go after those yahoo, rude, inconsiderate roundup drifters who are recklessly killing others' crops and taking the food out of the mouths of families, or defend those fine, innocent farmers/sprayers --- who are just victims themselves of unforeseeable acts of mother nature---from frivolous suits filed by a bunch of whiners. 


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We were asked to fly damage assement for a crop analysis person for lawyers and insurance purposes and it was around 175 square miles. From Greenville to Shelby. Is there still a burndown band after a certain date? Plus I have been doing alot of traveling around here and the idiots are spraying in 30mph winds with there booms running about 6-8 feet off the ground. No wonder we are in this mess. Lets cut them insurance checks and double crop it this year



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