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The Rural Voice, 2003-10, Page 50Advice Take action on velvet leaf while you can By John C. Benham Wellington County Weed Inspector 1 have been getting some calls of late about Velvetleaf and I have acted on them. These are good farmers who are concerned about the spread of this weed. In some cases. corn or soybeans infested with Velvetleaf have been combined and a few seeds are residual in the combine and are spread onto the next field or farm. I can assure you if you don't treat this weed as an evil invader; your property will likely be cursed with that weed forever. ' We. in Wellington. have been reasonably free of this weed but it certainly is gaining a foothold. I have been told that the seeds of NT("V THE TWINS ARE HERE!!! The N.D.E. twin auger mixers bring the fast, accurate mixing ability that N.D.E. vertical mixers are noted for to a larger range of mixers. The NUE Dual Vertical Mixer NDE has developed a unique concept, completely new to the vertical mixer industry. The NDE Dual Vertical Mixer allows a complete interchange of feed between the two mixing chambers and fast unloading. The unique dual-chambered design allows you to double your feed mixing capacity without sacrificing a quality ration. The truly unique design increases both the efficiency and accuracy of mixing and producing a high quality, Total Mixed Ration. Call George to book an on-farm demo. ELMIRA AGRI SYSTEM INC. Elmira - Head Office (519) 669.1655 Truck Home (519) 589-3777 (519) 364-5226 46 THE RURAL VOICE this plant can live in the soil for at least 60 years and each plant produces thousands. What does it look like? It can grow to 10 to 12 feet tall and down to 4 to 6 inches. It has a large heart shaped leaf with a yellow 5 -petal flower on a short stem where the leaf joins the stalk. This flower matures to a black seed head shaped like a pie crust marker. Each segment slits open and the seeds drop out. I suggest if the seed pods are mature and you plan to remove the weed, put a garbage bag over the standing plant, close it around the stem and pull it and carry it root up in the garbage bag to contain the seeds. If you don't, you will have a trail of plants next year where you walked this year. It is an annual and is covered with fine down like skin on the leaves and stalk — thus the name Velvetleaf. It has a very distinctive odour when handled. It is another one of the very clever weeds. It grows so the top leaf covers the growing point at the top of the stalk. So when it is sprayed with a herbicide all the leaves may be killed but the growing point is, protected and so continues to grow. Also, it produces a flush of new plants each spring and also germinates new plants throughout the growing season so you have plants at all stages but all will be in bloom. Each individual plant has buds, flowers and seeds. Apparently, pre -emergent herbicide spraying does not do a satisfactory job of control. A post -emergent spray for contact control with some residual action to stop the late emergers is required. I can not emphasize enough the need to control this weed. Some think that herbicides will look after every weed. Well if you think that way just travel through southwestern Ontario and observe. Take action now before it is too late!O c f s c