Do not use petroleum-based and other non-emulsifiable oils with LEVERAGE 360 Insecticide. All adjuvants regardless of their composition must be used according to the adjuvants manufacturer's use directions. A crop-oil-concentrate (COC) is specified for aerial applications. A high quality, non-ionic surfactant (NIS) is specified for ground applications. Other pesticides and fertilizers approved for use in a crop may be used in mixtures with LEVERAGE 360 Insecticide provided they have been tested and shown to be compatible.Īdjuvants: The use of an adjuvant with LEVERAGE 360 Insecticide may improve deposition, coverage and pest control. Tank-mixtures: LEVERAGE 360 Insecticide may be combined with foliar-applied fungicides, herbicides and insecticides/miticides. Keep and wash PPE separately from other laundry. If no such instructions for washables, use detergent and hot water. Chemical-resistant gloves made of any waterproof material such as, barrier laminate, butyl rubber, nitrile rubber, neoprene rubber, polyvinylchloride (PVC) or viton.įollow manufacturer's instructions for cleaning/maintaining PPE. acephate, and it worked well.For entry into treated areas that is permitted under the Worker Protection Standard and that involves contact with anything that has been treated, such as plants, soil, or water, wear:\r\n- Coveralls\r\n- Chemical-resistant gloves, such as barrier laminate or viton\r\n- Shoes plus socksĪpplicators and Other Handlers Must Wear: On some Wide Strike cotton we used the same mixture except it was one lb. We figured that at R4 we could get by without the long residual other chemicals (Belt, Intrepid ) provide. Not 100% but about $6.75 per acre for the chemical. Two days late we caught two worms per 25 sweeps-down from 12. Posted 15:23 (#5461308 - in reply to #5461013) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else? I used 6 oz and oil out of the flying service bulk tank for the first batch. Most of them wanted to add $1.50-$2.00 acre wiz bam oil. Posted 17:39 (#5461479 - in reply to #5461354) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else?Ĩ oz of besiege. Using some of them high priced crop oils? It's going to do a good job on the stink bugs and other bugs too. Posted 15:53 (#5461354 - in reply to #5461229) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else? Bifenthrin and using Topgaurd as fungicide since making the trip Having same problem here in Northeastern North Carolina Tim. NE Northmapton County NE NC Conway, North Carolina Posted 15:13 (#5461296 - in reply to #5461229) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else? $20-$25 applied an acre is hard to swallow for a worm spray. Some fields that shared a well with rice or corn and maybe stressed a little from time to time are above threshold. I'm finding very few on field with an abundance of irrigation water. Posted 13:48 (#5461229 - in reply to #5461140) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else? It seems anymore we always end up making a insecticide spray before it over. We have had to do some fungicide for frogeye. Mainly just green clover worms so far and a few stink bugs beginning to show up. Haven't had to spray insecticide yet this year. We have used it and it's expensive but it did a good job. It is more expensive than say bifenthrin which only has a 5 rating for corn earworm but has a 8 for both stinkbugs. Posted 12:51 (#5461140 - in reply to #5461013) Subject: RE: intrepid, besiege or something else?īesiege has a 9 rating in the MP 144 book for corn earworm which is as good as anything else and it does a decent job on the stink bugs but it's not rated as high as some products. Primary target is corn ear worms in beans. Posted 11:28 (#5461013) Subject: intrepid, besiege or something else?
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