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    #21
    Originally posted by jazz View Post
    Guys have lentils here on a 4 yr rotation. Something tells me that will be going up. Cant keep up with the disease pressure anymore. The lentil canopy is like a foot deep mat of jungle with dew under and on top every day plus rains.
    Just apply another round of fungicide but this time use 20 Imperial gallons per acre water for better coverage and canopy penetration. Why stop now?

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      #22
      With the third day of wind this is the best fungicide a farmer could ask for.
      I was going to spray my lentils with Delaro, label said “control” of scloretina. Did some investigating, the “control” last two wks. Funny how the retailers don’t tell you that.
      So used Elatus for $2.25/Ac less, as of today the Delaro control would be gone.

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        #23
        Extraordinary year here for pressure on peas. I might as well have pissed on them.

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          #24
          Early seeded lentils here planted on April 22-29 starting to turn. Heavy canopy sprayed once with Delaro, some with Priaxor. Showing good yield potential. Quality remains a wild card. Could use a rain to finish canola and cereals but willing to shave a few bushels to preserve the lentil quality. Barley acres seem to be up a signifigent amount here in our little piece of paradise. Disease showing up in chickpeas even after 3-4 fungicide apps but still showing good yield potential.

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            #25
            Is any crop worth fungicide spraying 3-4 times, yes there were some wild returns in chickpeas and lentils but maybe it's time for the breeders to focus more on disease resistance than some other novel traits that will ultimately mean ****-all if you can't grow the crop because of extreme disease susceptability.

            Think peas too!

            Fungicide applications don't guarantee quality, disease resistance doesn't even guarantee quality.....a wet harvest season can ruin it quickly.

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              #26
              Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
              Is any crop worth fungicide spraying 3-4 times, yes there were some wild returns in chickpeas and lentils but maybe it's time for the breeders to focus more on disease resistance than some other novel traits that will ultimately mean ****-all if you can't grow the crop because of extreme disease susceptability.

              Think peas too!

              Fungicide applications don't guarantee quality, disease resistance doesn't even guarantee quality.....a wet harvest season can ruin it quickly.
              Today’s price for chicks are 22.5 lb.
              Cost of 4-5 apps fungicide basically $100 ac maybe more.
              25 bu crop likely $250 expenses, you can fill in the ...........
              This is why I quit growing them.
              Not sure what expense you would put for “stress”.

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                #27
                Originally posted by bigzee View Post
                Today’s price for chicks are 22.5 lb.
                Cost of 4-5 apps fungicide basically $100 ac maybe more.
                25 bu crop likely $250 expenses, you can fill in the ...........
                This is why I quit growing them.
                Not sure what expense you would put for “stress”.
                Chicks are niche and can be oversupplied like nothing. That's what happened in the late 90s. Based on all the pulse I see went in, wouldn't risk that extra application because it will come right off margin. There is going to be a lot of product around and quality could be an issue.

                Also, spraying fungicide is building resistance fast.

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                  #28
                  I hear what your saying regarding risk and stress with growing chickpeas. It has become our speculation crop as markets for Kabulies can be volatile and we limit our acres to 10% or less of total seeded acres. In the 22 years we’ve been growing them we’ve had both feast and famine, 200-1500/acre so it keeps us chasing I guess. Lentils have been far more consistent returns but Aphanomyces is becoming big problem for some without any clear reasons why.

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