Farm Progress

Bob Wolf offers eight tips for even and targeted spray coverage.

Jodie Wehrspann

March 26, 2012

2 Min Read

Bob Wolf has spent most of his career training pesticide applicators. Now he’s teaching farmers.

Wolf, former extension specialist with Kansas State University and now manager of Wolf Consulting & Research LLC, says many farmers today own their own spraying equipment. The problem, he says, is that most have not been trained how to use the latest application technologies.

“State certification programs provide basic sprayer training,” Wolf says. “But farmers are asking for hands-on training geared specifically to them.”

To fill the knowledge void, Wolf, in partnership with BASF and TeeJet Technologies, has opened the On Target Application Academy. It’s a two-hour training program offered to farmers nationwide. The program covers nozzle selection, sprayer setup, and best practices for applications.

For more information, contact your BASF dealer or visit the BASF website. In the meantime, Wolf offers these eight tips to ensure even and targeted spray coverage:

1. Select nozzles that produce droplets that are as large as practical to provide necessary coverage. Larger droplets are less likely to drift. Nozzles designed to reduce drift are commonly available for applying crop protection products.

2. Increase product flow rates. If you use nozzles that put out 10 to 15 gallons of chemical per acre (GPA), increase to nozzles that put out 15 to 20 GPA. Higher flow rates with the proper nozzle design can reduce the chance of drift.

3. Use the lower end of the spray pressure range to provide adequate coverage. Higher pressures generate many more small droplets (less than 100 microns). However, some of the newer nozzle designs will require higher spray pressure to provide adequate coverage, still capable of reducing the drift potential.

4. Lower boom height to 18 to 24 in. above target. Wind speed increases with height. If boom height is a few inches lower, off-target drift is reduced.

5. Avoid high application speeds or rapid speed changes to ensure even coverage.

6. Avoid adverse weather conditions. Spray when wind speeds are less than 10 mph to prevent the chemical from being blown off target of the weed. Do not spray when the air is very calm. Calm air, or a temperature  inversion, reduces air mixing, causing spray to move downwind. Inversions are common near streams or ponds and  generally occur from late afternoon/early evening to early the following morning and then dissipate after sunrise and when the wind starts to stir. 

7. Leave a “buffer zone” if sensitive plants are downwind. Spray the buffer zone when the wind changes direction. The buffer zone width will be determined by droplet size and wind speed.

8. Consider using new, drift-reducing technologies. Examples include new nozzle designs, drift control additives, spray hoods and shields, and pulse width modulation.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like