How do you mix Bravo fungicide?
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How do you mix Bravo fungicide?
The required amount of Bravo 720 (Weather Stik) should be added slowly into the spray tank during filling. With concentrate sprays, pre-mix the required amount of Bravo 720 (Weather Stik) in a clean container and add to the spray tank as it is being filled.
What is Bravo fungicide?
Bravo® ZN is a broad-spectrum, protectant fungicide for dependable foliar disease control. Bravo ZN fungicide with WeatherStik® technology sticks and stays. The patented WeatherStik technology from Syngenta maximizes the ability of Bravo ZN to stick to plant surfaces, even during heavy rainfall or irrigation.
Is Bravo a systemic fungicide?
With curative reach-back activity, Tilt Bravo™ provides systemic and protectant control of foliar diseases in peanuts including early leaf spot, late leaf spot and web blotch.
What is tilt fungicide used for?
With benefits like quick rainfastness and tank-mix flexibility, Tilt® fungicide is an economical tool that provides full-season disease control on wheat, barley, stonefruits, tree nuts and vegetables. Tilt stops fungal growth before it can sporulate and moves systemically to protect new growth.
What is Bravo spray used for?
BRAVO Flowable Fungicide is an excellent fungicide when used according to label directior- for control of a broad spectrum of plant diseases on vegetabLe, agronomic and orchard crops) ornamental turfgrass and lawns1 and ornamental herbs, shrubs and trees.
What is Bravo insecticide used for?
Details
Active Ingredient | Chlorothalonil 54.0% |
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Target pests | Rust, purple spot, Cercospora leaf blight, botrytis blight, anthracnose, downy mildew, leaf spot, ring spot, pink rot, fruit rots, target spot, powdery mildew, stem rust, stripe rust, glume blotch, stem end rot, bottom rot, web blotch |
Is tilt a systemic fungicide?
Tilt 250 EC It’s a broad-spectrum systemic foliar fungicide for the control of a wide range of leaf and stem diseases in cereals.
Is propiconazole systemic?
Propiconazole is used agriculturally as a systemic fungicide on turfgrasses grown for seed and aesthetic or athletic value, wheat, mushrooms, corn, wild rice, peanuts, almonds, sorghum, oats, pecans, apricots, peaches, nectarines, plums, prunes and lemons.
Is switch fungicide systemic?
The cyprodinil in SWITCH is a Group 9 fungicide that has systemic properties enabling it to enter the plant tissue and fight the fungus from inside.
Is propiconazole a good fungicide?
Controlling diseases for 7 days to an entire season, depending on the disease or fungus, the product is a great fungicide to mix with other products, to control a wider range of diseases.