Farmers who spray dicamba this year are now required to keep
records of what neighboring crops are around them. Bayer dicamba lead Ryan Rubischko
tells Brownfield Ag News it’s part of the EPA’s 2019 dicamba label, “Knowing in
advance what are those neighboring fields? Those adjacent fields. So, when a
farmer’s ready to go in and make that application, they already know what those
surrounding, neighboring crops are.”
Bayer has been holding trainings – most recently in Blue Springs, Missouri – to educate farmers about the new label requirements.
Continue reading Bayer dicamba training underway at Brownfield Ag News.