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Rechtjabitte
4 years ago

Well, then I’m curious if glyphosate can make the herb! Most of these toxic plants have developed resistance to the agent. This makes it so terribly spread.

The stuff is forbidden as soon as possible.

This “harmless” means can cause severe health consequences and, contrary to the statement of Monsanto/Bayer, is very poorly developing. It is detectable in almost every product from conventional agriculture and is also enriched in humans.

Hope you at least did it. According to the manufacturer, a replant after dying of the sprayed surfaces is possible again as soon as possible. Read the manual.

And never use again

BerndBauer3
3 years ago
Reply to  Rechtjabitte

Another late answer.

I assume you don’t believe me. I’m sure I’m right.

Roundup is completely nontoxic for humans and animals. Every day, you can stir a tablespoon full into the stew. A lifetime. Nothing will happen except that it tastes strange.

The quantities found in food are unimaginably low. But today you can already find 0,000001g. If you take this amount daily for a lifetime, you get to a total of 0.03 grams.

There are many plant protection products that are more toxic to many people. And they still occur in higher concentrations in food.

But also many foods and spices naturally contain a certain proportion of toxins. If the plant protection product were, they would have been banned. Alcohol and cigarettes anyway.

pony
4 years ago

if you have sprayed almost all the grazing, this year without new exhalation no longer. isn’t growing.

roundup does not fight the roots. the cruciate is going to exaggerate. in contrast to the grasses. they are flat. Nevertheless, in about one week everything deceased must be brought together and disposed of.

several rain days must wash out the pesticide. then the floor can be loosened and sown in. the new ones grew secluded. ende august should then be mowed once (can be processed to heu), then the horses can be mowed again until the end of the grazing season.

the RESTMüLLL. contempt: gloves wear, since all parts of plants are highly toxic.

https://www.bioaktuell.ch/ Pflanzenbau/gruenland/unkraut-gruenland/jakobskreuzkraut-wie-bekaempf.html

preventive measures: regularly control and dispose of toxic plants. in some opposite ones there are more crossbows, in others e.g. storchschnabel, schöllkraut, black afterchatten, herbstzeitlose etc.

increased occurrence of these plants always indicates a not carefully carried out pasture care.

with us in the opposite it is this year of sharp hahnenfuss, which threatens to be overpowered. so much that you have to mow it.

FunnyFanny
4 years ago
Reply to  pony

Uh, Roundup is passed on to the roots… the growth then dries up and underground and doesn’t drive out again. At least it used to be the case when we used it at Ampfer.

pony
4 years ago
Reply to  FunnyFanny

kreuzkraut rooted a little deeper. but even the flat-rooted shelves you won’t get flat. shelves, though, also entangles, but forms out in windy seed-chotes and sowns.

the normal flat-worms like grasses – and wild herbs you get smoothly laminated.

– how much earlier?

the recipes are constantly changed.

pony
4 years ago

definitely.

now – and, for example, you can put in roundup – it still drives out.

FunnyFanny
4 years ago

About 20 years ago… was the recipe different?

Narva
4 years ago

it should have at least 2x crowy rain

Shiraunddati
4 years ago

So I’ve heard that you can only safely remove Jakobskreuzkraut if you dig it out, so with the root completely out. So toxins do nothing because then only the surface is destroyed, but as long as the roots are undamaged, it grows.

I don’t know that.

The pastures you will be able to use for the next two months, I don’t think I can use anymore. Depends on how often it rains.

BerndBauer3
3 years ago
Reply to  Shiraunddati

To completely remove the root of St. John’s Cross, you have to dig quite deeply. But for that there is roundup, which kills otherwise, unlike many other means, the root.

As a pasture, you could use it the next day. It doesn’t hurt the animals. But the scabble remains poisonous when it has died. It must therefore not be harvested or eaten by the animals.

The soil is not poisoned by Roundup. Roundup has no soil effect. You could plant salads or wipes or something else without problems the next day.

StRiW
4 years ago

Honestly, please ask your poison supplier.

Depending on the manufacturer, active ingredient and dose, there are different times to be observed. These differ according to the type of use of the pastures and the pastures.

Not in vain, anyone who today has to prove more than just a few m2 of privately processed a certificate of intoxication.

Depending on the locality, you need a special permit for poison use.

Simplex is 7 days, for the other poisons 28 days. It is important to have a re-seed.

BerndBauer3
3 years ago
Reply to  StRiW

Another late answer. I came to this question by chance.

Simplex does not have such a short waiting time because it is mined within 7 days, but because it is completely nontoxic for animals. Apparently it is not taken up by the body, otherwise it would be in meat and milk.

Simplex is, on the contrary, the most durable weed control agent I know. It is still in the ground even after a year. Also in hay or silage which is harvested from the surface it is still present after a year. Even in the manure and in the manure of the animals there is so much active ingredient that weeds, but also potatoes and beetles are killed.

That’s different from Roundup. This is also nontoxic for humans and animals. But it is found in a small amount in meat and milk. That’s why the waiting period. In the soil it is completely degraded after 2 weeks.

berlina76
4 years ago

At least two weeks.