
Do you apply pesticides on your farm? Even though many livestock
farms make use of pesticides, a recent report has highlighted that
a high proportion of them don't see themselves as spray operators.
If you ever use a farm sprayer, including a knapsack sprayer, you
are a spray operator.
"If you answered 'yes' then be aware that spraying activities on
livestock farms are likely to come under much closer scrutiny,"
says ADAS pesticides
specialist Paul Fogg, one of the experts involved in the
DEFRA-funded
Environment Sensitive Farming advice contract.
"Not surprisingly water protection is driving the change," says
Dr Fogg.
"Environment Agency
data show that more than 95% of all surface water quality
exceedences - that's where a pesticide is measured at levels above
the 0.1 part per billion standard - are caused by just nine
herbicides.
"Of these, atrazine and simazine have already had their
approvals revoked and
IPU (isoproturon) and diuron will soon be removed from the
market. That leaves mecoprop, 2,4-D, MCPA, dichlorprop and
chlorotoluron and major uses of the first four of these are in
grassland management."
Minimised
From a business perspective targeting pesticides also makes
sense. When products applied end up in watercourses they are
failing to do their job in the field. So how can these losses be
minimised?
The first step, says Dr Fogg, is to minimise pesticide use
through better management. "For example, where leys are overgrazed,
particularly in late autumn/winter, they can become poached. The
resulting bare soil will allow weeds in. Reduce poaching and you
reduce the need to use pesticides," he adds.
Every farm claiming the
single payment should already have completed a Soil Management
Review as part of cross-compliance. "When soil is washed into
streams phosphates and pesticides go with it. And it doesn't have
to be serious erosion to cause environmental problems. Muddy water
running off fields will be sufficient."
Minimising erosion by maintaining good soil structure,
cultivating across slopes, establishing crops early and using
min-till cultivations will all help. Buffer strips alongside
watercourses and beetle banks positioned across the slope can also
be useful measures. Both earn
Entry Level
Stewardship (ELS) points. Forage maize fields are particularly
at risk and there are some specific ELS options to help.
Identifying problem
For product selection, the key is identifying the problem
correctly. Timing is also critical. "Take account of weather
forecasts and soil conditions. The phenoxy herbicides frequently
found in watercourses are mobile compounds, so if there is
significant rainfall immediately after spraying, these pesticides
will run-off. When rain is forecast, delay spraying or consider
using a different type of product," advises Dr Fogg.
All sprayer operators must be trained and
NPTC certificated. But this
should not be a one-off exercise. Best practice guidance changes
over time.
"Joining the
National Register of Sprayer
Operators (NRoSO) is a good way of making sure you keep
up-to-date."
Pesticides must be stored safely and securely. This means sited
away from watercourses and bunded so that any leakages will be
contained. There are a number of cabinet type devices which are
ideal for small-scale storage.
When handling, mixing and filling, you are working with the
pesticide concentrate so even the slightest splash or drip has the
potential to contaminate. It has been calculated the pesticide left
on one foil seal is sufficient to contaminate 30km of stream.
Prevention
Think about where you are filling the sprayer. This will often
be in the yard on an impermeable surface like concrete. To prevent
any spills and splashes getting into drains the filling area must
be bunded and washings from this area collected for safe
disposal.
"When possible, the best place to fill the sprayer is in the
field well away from any watercourses," he suggests. "Dirty
containers can be up to five times more expensive to dispose of, so
triple rinse empty packs and make sure they are well drained.
Remember, too, that drum incinerators will be illegal after 15 May
this year and that all this advice applies just as much to
knapsacks and ATV sprayers as it does to large-scale
equipment."
Make sure all equipment, including nozzles, is in good working
order. Preferably get the sprayer - knapsacks included - tested
annually under the
National Sprayer
Testing Scheme.
Plan applications, so that you don't mix more than you need.
Follow the label instructions carefully, paying particular
attention to buffer zone requirements under the
LERAP
scheme. Leave an area of the field untreated so it can be used to
dispose of tank washings. Treat headlands last to avoid taking
pesticides out of the field on tractor wheels when refilling. Wash
down the sprayer in the field.
Finally, remember it is now illegal to dispose of washings to
soil or grass areas unless you have a Groundwater Authorisation and
even then you will only be able to use that area once a year.
| FURTHER INFORMATION |
-
The Voluntary Initiative has published a leaflet on Pesticide
Use on Livestock Farms. Printed copies are available from your
local distributor
- BCPC Best Practice booklets Small Scale Spraying and Large
Scale Spraying, priced at £10 each, are available from the
BCPC or call 01420 593
200
- NRoSO - call 02476 857
600
- NSTS - call 01733 362
925
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