a97107de46
Image rebuild (skip scrape) / build (push) Failing after 1h37m12s
Dockerfile: self-contained image with corpus + Chroma + BM25 baked in. Drawbar's compose pulls + runs without volume mounts. Built from sources.json (labels schema), PRODUCT_NAME=crop_chem by default, HYBRID_SEARCH=true (always-on for production quality). RERANK_URL + OLLAMA_URL get set at compose time. .gitea/workflows/refresh.yml: monthly cron (1st @ 06:00 UTC) does full scrape → reindex → image push. Scrapes Bayer (~30 min) + EPA PPLS row-crop filtered (~7h). Skips reindex+push if no corpus diff. Tags pushed: :latest, :<sha12>, :corpus-<YYYY.MM.DD>. .gitea/workflows/image-only.yml: on-demand or auto on code-only pushes to main (paths: docs_mcp/, rag/, scrape/, requirements.txt, Dockerfile, sources.json). Reindexes from committed corpus, builds image, pushes. ~10 min vs ~9h full refresh. .gitignore: corpus/ now COMMITTED (4,159 labels, 265 MB of .md + sidecars). Lets image-only.yml rebuild indexes without re-scraping. chroma/ + bm25/ still gitignored (regenerable binary indexes). .dockerignore: drops venv, eval results, PLAN/README/CLAUDE.md, deploy/, .git/ — keeps the image lean. corpus + chroma + bm25 explicitly NOT in dockerignore (those go INTO the image). Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2096 lines
92 KiB
Markdown
2096 lines
92 KiB
Markdown
# OUTLOOK HERBICIDE
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- EPA Reg No: **7969-156**
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- Registrant: BASF AGRICULTURAL SOLUTIONS US, LLC
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- Signal word: Warning
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- Active ingredients: dimethenamid-P (63.9%)
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- Label accepted: 2019-11-29
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- Source PDF: https://www3.epa.gov/pesticides/chem_search/ppls/007969-00156-20191129.pdf
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---
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UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
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WASHINGTON, DC 20460
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PRIA Non-New-Use Label Acceptable v.20150320
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OFFICE OF CHEMICAL SAFETY
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AND POLLUTION PREVENTION
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November 29, 2019
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Craig Kleppe
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Agricultural Products Division
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BASF Corporation
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26 Davis Drive
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P.O. Box 13528
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Research Triangle Park, NC
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27709-3528
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Subject: PRIA Label Amendment – Amending use pattern to delete the preemergence
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application timing and shift to early postemergence.
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Product Name: Outlook Herbicide
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EPA Registration Number: 7969-156
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Application Date: November 2, 2018
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Decision Number: 545851
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Dear Mr. Kleppe:
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The amended label referred to above, submitted in connection with registration under the Federal
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Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, as amended, is acceptable. This approval does not
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affect any conditions that were previously imposed on this registration. You continue to be
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subject to existing conditions on your registration and any deadlines connected with them.
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A stamped copy of your labeling is enclosed for your records. This labeling supersedes all
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previously accepted labeling. The next label printing of this product must use this labeling unless
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subsequent changes have been approved. You must submit one copy of the final printed labeling
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before you release the product for shipment with the new labeling. In accordance with 40 CFR
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152.130(c), you may distribute or sell this product under the previously approved labeling for 18
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months from the date of this letter. After 18 months, you may only distribute or sell this product
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if it bears this new revised labeling or subsequently approved labeling. “To distribute or sell” is
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defined under FIFRA section 2(gg) and its implementing regulation at 40 CFR 152.3.
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Should you wish to add/retain a reference to the company’s website on your label, then please be
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aware that the website becomes labeling under the Federal Insecticide Fungicide and Rodenticide
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Act and is subject to review by the Agency. If the website is false or misleading, the product
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would be misbranded and unlawful to sell or distribute under FIFRA section 12(a)(1)(E). 40
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CFR 156.10(a)(5) list examples of statements EPA may consider false or misleading. In addition,
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regardless of whether a website is referenced on your product’s label, claims made on the
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website may not substantially differ from those claims approved through the registration process.
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Therefore, should the Agency find or if it is brought to our attention that a website contains false
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or misleading statements or claims substantially differing from the EPA approved registration,
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the website will be referred to the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance.
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Page 2 of 2
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EPA Reg. No. 7969-156
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Decision No. 545851
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Your release for shipment of the product constitutes acceptance of these conditions. If these
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conditions are not complied with, the registration will be subject to cancellation in accordance
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with FIFRA section 6. If you have any questions, please contact Julia Kerr by phone at 703-347-
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0386, or via email at kerr.julia@epa.gov.
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Enclosure
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Sincerely,
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Emily Schmid, Product Manager 25
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Herbicide Branch
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Registration Division (7505P)
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Office of Pesticide Pro
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grams
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A selective residual herbicide for use in certain agricultural crops
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Active Ingredient*:
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dimethenamid-P: (S)-2-chloro-N-[(1-methyl-2-methoxy)ethyl]-
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N-(2,4-dimethyl-thien-3-yl)-acetamide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63.9%
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Other Ingredients**: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36.1%
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Total: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100.0%
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* Contains 6.0 pounds of active ingredient per gallon
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** Contains petroleum distillates
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EPA Reg. No. 7969-156 EPA Est. No.
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KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN
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WARNING/AVISO
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See inside for complete First Aid, Precautionary Statements, Directions For Use,
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Conditions of Sale and Warranty, and state-specific crop and/or use site restrictions.
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In case of an emergency endangering life or property involving this product,
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call day or night 1-800-832-HELP (4357).
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Net Contents:
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BASF Corporation
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26 Davis Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
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Si usted no entiende la etiqueta, busque a alguien para que se la explique a usted en
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detalle. (If you do not understand the label, find someone to explain it to you in detail.)
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Dimethenamid-P Group 15 Herbicide
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11/29/2019
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7969-156
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2
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Precautionary Statements
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Hazards to Humans and Domestic Animals
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WARNING.
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Causes substantial but temporary eye injury. Harmful if
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inhaled, swallowed, or absorbed through the skin.
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DO NOT get in eyes or on clothing. Avoid contact with
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skin. Avoid breathing spray mist. Prolonged or frequently
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repeated skin contact may cause allergic reactions in some
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individuals. Wash hands thoroughly with soap and water
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||
after handling and before eating, drinking, chewing gum,
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using tobacco, or using the toilet. Remove and wash con-
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taminated clothing before reuse.
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Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
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Applicators and other handlers must wear:
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• Long-sleeved shirt and long pants
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• Waterproof gloves
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• Shoes plus socks
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• Protective eyewear (goggles or a face shield)
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User Safety Requirements
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||
Discard clothing and other absorbent materials that have
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||
been drenched or heavily contaminated with this product’s
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concentrate. DO NOT reuse them. Follow the manufac -
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turer’s instructions for cleaning and maintaining PPE. If no
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||
such instructions for washables exist, use detergent and
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||
hot water. Keep and wash PPE separately from other
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laundry.
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Engineering Controls
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When handlers use closed systems, enclosed cabs, or air-
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craft in a manner that meets the requirements listed in the
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Worker Protection Standard (WPS) for agricultural
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pesticides [40 CFR 170.240(d)(4-6)], the handler PPE
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requirements may be reduced or modified as specified in
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the WPS.
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IMPORTANT:When reduced PPE is worn because a
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closed system is being used, handlers must be provided all
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PPE specified above for applicators and other handlers
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and have such PPE immediately for use in an emergency,
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such as a spill or equipment breakdown.
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Mixers and loaders for aerial applications must use
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||
a closed system that meets the requirements listed in the
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Worker Protection Standard (WPS) for Agricultural
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Pesticides [40 CFR 170.240 (d)(4)] for dermal protection,
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and must:
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• Wear personal protective equipment (PPE) required in the
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PPE section of this labeling for applicators and other
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handlers
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• Wear protective eyewear, if the system operates under
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pressure
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• Either use a closed system that also meets the require-
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ments in the WPS for inhalation protection or wear a
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NIOSH-approved dust-mist respirator with a TC84
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cartridge
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• Be provided and have immediately available for use in an
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emergency, such as a spill or equipment breakdown:
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coveralls, chemical-resistant footwear, and dust-mist
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respirator, or if using a closed system cab that provides
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respiratory protection, a NIOSH-approved dust-mist
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respirator with a TC84 cartridge
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FIRST AID
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If in eyes
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• Hold eyes open and rinse slowly and gently with water for 15 to 20 minutes.
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• Remove contact lenses, if present, after the first 5 minutes; then continue rinsing eyes.
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• Call a poison control center for treatment advice.
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If swallowed
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• Call a poison control center or doctor immediately for treatment advice.
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• DO NOT induce vomiting unless told to do so by a poison control center or doctor.
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• DO NOT give any liquid to the person.
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• DO NOT give anything by mouth to an unconscious person.
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If on skin or clothing
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• Take off contaminated clothing.
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• Rinse skin immediately with plenty of water for 15 to 20 minutes.
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• Call a poison control center or doctor for treatment advice.
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If inhaled
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• Move person to fresh air.
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• If person is not breathing, call 911 or an ambulance; then give artificial respiration, preferably
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by mouth to mouth, if possible.
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• Call a poison control center or doctor for further treatment advice.
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HOTLINE NUMBER
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Have the product container or label with you when calling a poison control center or doctor or going for treatment.
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You may also contact BASF Corporation for emergency medical treatment information: 1-800-832-HELP (4357).
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Note to Physician: Contains petroleum distillate. Vomiting may cause aspiration pneumonia.
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3
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Environmental Hazards
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DO NOT apply directly to water, areas where surface water
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is present, or intertidal areas below the mean high water
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mark. DO NOT contaminate water when disposing of
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equipment washwater or rinsate.
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Dimethenamid-P has properties that may result in ground-
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water contamination. Application in areas where soils are
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permeable or coarse and groundwater is near the surface
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could result in groundwater contamination.
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Dimethenamid-P has properties that may result in surface
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water contamination via dissolved runoff and runoff
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erosion. Practices should be followed to minimize the
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potential for dissolved runoff and/or runoff erosion.
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Point-source Contamination. To prevent point-source
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contamination, DO NOT mix or load this or any other pes-
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ticide product within 50 feet of wells (including abandoned
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wells and drainage wells), sinkholes, perennial or intermit-
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tent streams and rivers, and natural or impounded lakes
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and reservoirs. This setback does not apply to properly
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capped or plugged abandoned wells and does not apply to
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impervious pad or dike mixing/loading areas as described
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below.
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Mixing, loading, rinsing, or washing operations performed
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within 50 feet of a well are allowed only when conducted
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on an impervious pad constructed to withstand the weight
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of the heaviest load that may be on or move across the
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pad. The pad must be self-contained to prevent surface
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water flow over or from the pad. The pad capacity must be
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maintained at 110% that of the largest pesticide container
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or application equipment used on the pad and have suffi-
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cient capacity to contain all product spills, equipment or
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container leaks, equipment washwater, and rainwater that
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may fall on the pad. The containment capacity does not
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apply to vehicles delivering pesticide shipments to the
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mixing/loading site. States may have in effect additional
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requirements regarding wellhead setbacks and operational
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containment.
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Care must be taken when using this product to prevent:
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||
• Back-siphoning into wells
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• Spills
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• Improper disposal of excess pesticide, spray mixes, or
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rinsates
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Check valves or anti-siphoning devices must be used on all
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mixing equipment.
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Movement Dissolved in Runoff or through Soil.
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DO NOT apply under conditions which favor runoff.
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DO NOT apply to impervious substrates such as paved or
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highly compacted surfaces or frozen soils. Groundwater
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contamination may occur in areas where soils are perme-
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able or coarse and groundwater is near the surface.
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To minimize the possibility of groundwater contamination,
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carefully follow application rate as affected by soil type in
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the Application Instructions section of this label.
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DO NOT apply if all three criteria exist: coarse soils classi-
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fied as sand (does not include loamy sand or sandy loam),
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less than 3% organic matter (as determined by soil tests, if
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not known), and where depth to groundwater is 30 feet or
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less.
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Movement by Water Erosion of Treated Soil.
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DO NOT apply or incorporate this product by flood or fur-
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row irrigation. Ensure treated areas have received at least
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0.5 inch of rainfall before using tailwater for subsequent irri-
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gation of other fields.
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Endangered Species Protection
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This product may have effects on federally listed threatened
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or endangered plant species or their critical habitat. When
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using this product, you must follow the measures
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contained in the Endangered Species Protection Bulletin
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for the county or parish in which you are applying the pesti-
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cide. To determine if your county or parish has a Bulletin,
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and to obtain that Bulletin, consult
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http://www.epa.gov/espp/, or call 1-844-447-3813 no
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more than 6 months before using this product. Applicators
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must use Bulletins that are in effect in the month in which
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the pesticide will be applied. New Bulletins will generally be
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available from the above sources 6 months before their
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effective dates.
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To avoid adverse effects on endangered plant species,
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applicators must comply with the following mitigation
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measures when endangered plant species are known to
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occur in proximity of the application site:
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• Aerial Application - Leave a 150-foot untreated buffer
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between treatment area and endangered plant
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populations.
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• Ground Application - Use low-pressure nozzles
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according to the manufacturer’s specifications that pro-
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duce only medium-to-coarse or very coarse droplets
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AND leave a 35-foot untreated buffer between treatment
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area and known endangered plant populations.
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USER SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS
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||
Users should:
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• Remove clothing/PPE immediately if pesticide gets
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inside. Then wash thoroughly and put on clean clothing.
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• Remove PPE immediately after handling this product.
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Wash the outside of gloves before removing. As soon as
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possible, wash thoroughly and change into clean
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clothing.
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4
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Directions For Use
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||
It is a violation of federal law to use this product in a man-
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ner inconsistent with its labeling. DO NOT apply this
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product in a way that will contact workers or other
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persons, either directly or through drift. Only protected
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||
handlers may be in the area during application. For any
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||
requirements specific to your state or tribe, consult the
|
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agency responsible for pesticide regulation.
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||
Unless otherwise directed in supplemental labeling, follow
|
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all applicable directions, restrictions, precautions and
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||
Conditions of Sale and Warranty. This labeling must be
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in the user’s possession during application.
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(continued)
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(continued)
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STORAGE AND DISPOSAL
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DO NOT contaminate water, food, or feed by storage or
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disposal. Open dumping is prohibited.
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Pesticide Storage
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||
DO NOT use or store near heat or open flame. Store in
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||
original container in a well-ventilated area separately from
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||
fertilizer, feed, or foodstuffs and away from other
|
||
pesticides. Avoid cross-contamination with other
|
||
pesticides. Groundwater contamination may be reduced
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||
by diking and flooring of permanent liquid bulk storage
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||
sites with an impermeable material.
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||
STORAGE AND DISPOSAL (continued)
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||
Pesticide Disposal
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||
Wastes resulting from this product must be disposed of
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||
on-site or at a waste disposal facility. Improper disposal of
|
||
excess pesticide, spray mix, or rinsate is a violation of fed-
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eral law. If these wastes cannot be disposed of according
|
||
to label instructions, contact the state agency responsible
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||
for pesticide regulation or the Hazardous Waste represen-
|
||
tative at the nearest EPA Regional Office for guidance.
|
||
Container Handling
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||
Nonrefillable Container. DO NOT reuse or refill this
|
||
container. Triple rinse or pressure rinse container
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||
(or equivalent) promptly after emptying; then offer for
|
||
recycling, if available, or reconditioning, if appropriate, or
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||
puncture and dispose of in a sanitary landfill, or by inciner-
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ation, or by other procedures approved by state and local
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||
authorities.
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Triple rinse containers small enough to shake
|
||
(capacity
|
||
/unif0a35 gallons) as follows: Empty the remaining
|
||
contents into application equipment or a mix tank and
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||
drain for 10 seconds after the flow begins to drip. Fill the
|
||
container 1/4 full with water and recap. Shake for 10 sec-
|
||
onds. Pour rinsate into application equipment or a mix
|
||
tank, or store rinsate for later use or disposal. Drain for
|
||
10 seconds after the flow begins to drip. Repeat this pro-
|
||
cedure two more times.
|
||
Triple rinse containers too large to shake
|
||
(capacity > 5 gallons) as follows: Empty the remaining
|
||
contents into application equipment or a mix tank. Fill the
|
||
container 1/4 full with water. Replace and tighten
|
||
closures. Tip container on its side and roll it back and
|
||
forth, ensuring at least one complete revolution, for
|
||
30 seconds. Stand the container on its end and tip it back
|
||
and forth several times. Turn the container over onto its
|
||
other end and tip it back and forth several times. Empty
|
||
the rinsate into application equipment or a mix tank, or
|
||
store rinsate for later use or disposal. Repeat this proce-
|
||
dure two more times.
|
||
Pressure rinse as follows: Empty the remaining
|
||
contents into application equipment or mix tank and con-
|
||
tinue to drain for 10 seconds after the flow begins to drip.
|
||
Hold container upside down over application equipment
|
||
or mix tank, or collect rinsate for later use or disposal.
|
||
Insert pressure rinsing nozzle in the side of the container
|
||
and rinse at about 40 PSI for at least 30 seconds. Drain
|
||
for 10 seconds after the flow begins to drip.
|
||
Refillable Container. Refill this container with pesticide
|
||
only. DO NOT reuse this container for any other purpose.
|
||
Triple rinsing the container before final disposal is the
|
||
responsibility of the person disposing of the container.
|
||
Cleaning before refilling is the responsibility of the refiller.
|
||
AGRICULTURAL USE REQUIREMENTS
|
||
Use this product only in accordance with its labeling and
|
||
with the Worker Protection Standard, 40 CFR Part 170.
|
||
This standard contains requirements for the protection of
|
||
agricultural workers on farms, forests, nurseries, and
|
||
greenhouses, and handlers of agricultural pesticides. It
|
||
contains requirements for training, decontamination, notifi-
|
||
cation, and emergency assistance. It also contains
|
||
specific instructions and exceptions pertaining to the
|
||
statements on this label about personal protective equip-
|
||
ment (PPE) and restricted-entry interval. The requirements
|
||
in this box only apply to uses of this product that are cov-
|
||
ered by the Worker Protection Standard.
|
||
DO NOT enter or allow worker entry into treated areas
|
||
during the restricted-entry interval (REI) of 12 hours.
|
||
EXCEPTION: If the product is soil injected or soil incor-
|
||
porated, the Worker Protection Standard, under certain
|
||
circumstances, allows workers to enter the treated area if
|
||
there will be no contact with anything that has been
|
||
treated.
|
||
PPE required for early entry to treated areas that is permit-
|
||
ted under the Worker Protection Standard and that
|
||
involves contact with anything that has been treated, such
|
||
as plants, soil, or water, is:
|
||
• Coveralls
|
||
• Waterproof gloves
|
||
• Shoes plus socks
|
||
• Protective eyewear (goggles or a face shield)
|
||
|
||
5
|
||
In Case of Emergency
|
||
In case of large-scale spill of this product, call:
|
||
• CHEMTREC 1-800-424-9300
|
||
• BASF Corporation 1-800-832-HELP (4357)
|
||
In case of medical emergency regarding this product, call:
|
||
• Your local doctor for immediate treatment
|
||
• Your local poison control center (hospital)
|
||
• BASF Corporation 1-800-832-HELP (4357)
|
||
Steps to take if material is released or spilled:
|
||
• Dike and contain the spill with inert material (sand, earth,
|
||
etc.) and transfer liquid and solid diking material to sepa-
|
||
rate containers for disposal.
|
||
• Remove contaminated clothing, and wash affected skin
|
||
areas with soap and water.
|
||
• Wash clothing before reuse.
|
||
• Keep the spill out of all sewers and open bodies of water.
|
||
Product Information
|
||
Outlook® herbicide is a selective residual herbicide for
|
||
controlling many annual grass weeds, annual broadleaf
|
||
weeds, and sedge as they germinate (see Table 1).
|
||
Outlook can be used in agricultural field and row crops
|
||
including bean (dry), beets [sugar, table (garden)],
|
||
corn [field corn (grain, seed, silage), fresh sweet corn, pop-
|
||
corn], cotton, fallow, garlic, hops, horseradish, onions (dry
|
||
bulb, green), peanut, perennial grasses grown for seed,
|
||
potato, pumpkin, radish, rutabaga, shallots (dry bulb),
|
||
sorghum (grain), soybean, sweet potato, tuberous and
|
||
corm vegetables, turnip, and winter squash.
|
||
Table 1. Weeds Controlled
|
||
(continued)
|
||
Common Name Scientific Name
|
||
Annual Grass Weeds
|
||
Barnyardgrass Echinochloa crus-galli
|
||
Bluegrass, annual Poa annua
|
||
Bluegrass, roughstalk Poa trivialis
|
||
Brome, California Bromus carinatus
|
||
Brome, downy Bromus tectorum
|
||
Crabgrass, large Digitaria sanguinalis
|
||
Crabgrass, smooth Digitaria ischaemum
|
||
Cupgrass, Southwestern Eriochloa gracilis
|
||
Cupgrass, woolly1 Eriochloa villosa
|
||
Fescue, rattail Vulpia myuros
|
||
Foxtail, giant Setaria faberi
|
||
Foxtail, green Setaria viridis
|
||
Foxtail, yellow Setaria glauca
|
||
Goosegrass Eleusine indica
|
||
Johnsongrass (seedling)1 Sorghum halepense
|
||
Millet, wild proso1 Panicum miliaceum
|
||
Panicum, fall Panicum dichotomiflorum
|
||
Panicum, Texas1 Panicum texanum
|
||
Red rice Oryza sativa
|
||
Ryegrass, Italian Lolium multiflorum
|
||
Sandbur1 Cenchrus spp.
|
||
Shattercane1 Sorghum bicolor
|
||
Signalgrass, broadleaf1 Brachiaria platyphylla
|
||
Witchgrass Panicum capillare
|
||
STORAGE AND DISPOSAL (continued)
|
||
Container Handling (continued)
|
||
Triple rinse as follows: To clean the container before
|
||
final disposal, empty the remaining contents from this
|
||
container into application equipment or mix tank. Fill the
|
||
container about 10% full with water. Agitate vigorously or
|
||
recirculate water with the pump for 2 minutes. Pour or
|
||
pump rinsate into application equipment or rinsate collec-
|
||
tion system. Repeat this rinsing procedure two more
|
||
times.
|
||
When this container is empty, replace the cap and seal all
|
||
openings that have been opened during use; return the
|
||
container to the point of purchase or to a designated lo -
|
||
cation. This container must only be refilled with a pesticide
|
||
product. Prior to refilling, inspect carefully for damage
|
||
such as cracks, punctures, abrasions, worn-out threads
|
||
and closure devices. Check for leaks after refilling and
|
||
before transport. DO NOT transport if this container is
|
||
damaged or leaking. If the container is damaged, or leak-
|
||
ing, or obsolete and not returned to the point of purchase
|
||
or to a designated location, triple rinse emptied container
|
||
and offer for recycling, if available, or dispose of container
|
||
in compliance with state and local regulations.
|
||
|
||
6
|
||
Table 1. Weeds Controlled (continued)
|
||
Mode of Action
|
||
Dimethenamid-P , the active ingredient in Outlook, is a
|
||
Group 15 (WSSA) Group K3 (HRAC) herbicide belonging
|
||
to the chloroacetamide chemistry class. Outlook is a root-
|
||
and-shoot growth inhibitor that controls susceptible
|
||
germinating seedlings before or soon after they emerge
|
||
from the soil.
|
||
Herbicide Resistance Management
|
||
Outlook is a Group 15/Group K3 herbicide. Any weed
|
||
pop ulation may contain or develop plants naturally resistant
|
||
to Outlook and other Group 15 herbicides. Weed species
|
||
with resistance to Group 15 may eventually dominate the
|
||
weed population if Group 15 herbicides are used repeat-
|
||
edly in the same field or in successive years as the primary
|
||
meth od of control for targeted species. This may result in
|
||
partial or total loss of control of those species by Outlook
|
||
or other Group 15 herbicides.
|
||
To delay herbicide resistance consider:
|
||
• Avoiding the consecutive use of Outlook or other target-
|
||
site-of-action Group 15 herbicides that have a similar
|
||
target site of action on the same weed species.
|
||
• Using tank mixes or premixes with herbicides from differ-
|
||
ent target-site-of-action groups as long as the involved
|
||
products are all registered for the same use, have differ-
|
||
ent sites of action, and are both effective at the tank mix
|
||
or prepack rate on the weed(s) of concern.
|
||
• Basing herbicide use on a comprehensive IPM
|
||
(Integrated Pest Management) program including cultural
|
||
and mechanical methods.
|
||
• Monitoring treated weed populations for loss of field effi-
|
||
cacy, and control of escapes with effective alternative
|
||
herbicides or mechanical methods.
|
||
• Identify weeds present in the field through scouting and
|
||
field history and understand their biology. The weed-
|
||
control program needs to consider all of the weeds
|
||
present.
|
||
• Scout fields prior to application to identify the weed
|
||
species present and their growth stage to determine if
|
||
the intended application will be effective.
|
||
• Scout fields after application to verify the treatment was
|
||
effective.
|
||
• Suspected herbicide-resistance weeds may be identified
|
||
by these indicators:
|
||
1. Failure to control a weed species normally controlled
|
||
by the herbicide at the dose applied, especially if con-
|
||
trol is achieved on adjacent weeds;
|
||
2. A spreading patch of non-controlled plants of a partic-
|
||
ular weed species; and
|
||
3. Surviving plants mixed with controlled individuals of the
|
||
same species.
|
||
• If resistance is suspected, treat weed escapes with an
|
||
herbicide with a different MOA and/or use non-chemical
|
||
methods to remove escapes, as practical, with the goal
|
||
of preventing further seed production.
|
||
• Report any incidence of non-performance of this product
|
||
against a particular weed species to your local BASF
|
||
representative.
|
||
• Contacting your local extension specialist, certified crop
|
||
advisors, and/or manufacturer for herbicide resistance
|
||
management and/or integrated weed management direc-
|
||
tions for specific crops and resistant weed biotypes.
|
||
Application Instructions
|
||
Outlook provides most effective weed control when
|
||
applied by ground or aerial equipment and subsequently
|
||
incorporated into soil by rainfall, sprinkler irrigation, or
|
||
mechanical tillage before weed seedling emergence from
|
||
soil. Outlook can also be applied through chemigation.
|
||
Outlook may be applied as a preplant incorporated,
|
||
preplant surface, preemergence, early postemergence, or
|
||
Common Name Scientific Name
|
||
Annual Broadleaf Weeds
|
||
Amaranth, Palmer Amaranthus palmeri
|
||
Amaranth, Powell Amaranthus powellii
|
||
Beggarweed, Florida1 Desmodium tortuosum
|
||
Carpetweed Mollugo verticillata
|
||
Chamomile, mayweed Anthemis cotula
|
||
Eclipta1 Eclipta alba
|
||
Lambsquarters, common1 Chenopodium album
|
||
Nightshade, black2 Solanum nigrum
|
||
Nightshade, cutleaf2 Solanum triflorum
|
||
Nightshade, Eastern black2 Solanum ptycanthum
|
||
Nightshade, hairy2 Solanum sarrachoides
|
||
Pigweed, prostrate Amaranthus blitoides
|
||
Pigweed, redroot Amaranthus retroflexus
|
||
Pigweed, smooth Amaranthus hybridus
|
||
Pigweed, tumble Amaranthus albus
|
||
Purslane, common Portulaca oleracea
|
||
Pusley, Florida Richardia scabra
|
||
Ragweed, common1 Ambrosia artemisiifolia
|
||
Spurge, nodding Chamaesyce nutans
|
||
Spurge, spotted Chamaesyce maculata
|
||
Waterhemp, common2 Amaranthus rudis
|
||
Waterhemp, tall2 Amaranthus tuberculatus
|
||
Sedge
|
||
Flatsedge, rice Cyperus iria
|
||
Nutsedge, yellow2 Cyperus esculentus
|
||
1 Partial control or suppression only. To complement control, use
|
||
Outlook® herbicide in tank mixes or sequential application with other
|
||
herbicides that provide additional control of these weed species.
|
||
2 For best control of these species, use the highest rate specified by soil
|
||
type. If dry conditions exist near application or excessive rainfall occurs
|
||
early in season, a post emergence herbicide or cultivation may be
|
||
required to help control these weeds.
|
||
|
||
7
|
||
layby (corn) treatment. Outlook® herbicide may be
|
||
applied using water or sprayable fluid fertilizer as the spray
|
||
carrier. Additionally, Outlook may be impregnated on and
|
||
applied with dry bulk fertilizer. Sprayable fluid fertilizer as a
|
||
carrier is not advised for use after crop emergence. Refer
|
||
to Additives for more information.
|
||
Application Rate
|
||
Application rates for Outlook when applied alone, in tank
|
||
mix, or in sequential applications are given in Table 2, and
|
||
vary by soil texture and organic matter content. Refer to
|
||
Crop-specific Information for additional rate information.
|
||
Table 2. Outlook Application Rate/Acre
|
||
1,2,3
|
||
Soil texture groups used in this label are coarse (sand,
|
||
loamy sand, sandy loam), medium (silt, silt loam, loam,
|
||
sandy clay loam), and fine (sandy clay, silty clay, silty clay
|
||
loam, clay loam, and clay).
|
||
DO NOT apply on coarse soils classified as sand (does not
|
||
include loamy sand or sandy loam) with less than
|
||
3% organic matter (as determined by soil tests, if not
|
||
known), and where depth to groundwater is 30 feet or less.
|
||
When use rates are expressed in ranges, use the lower
|
||
rate for more coarsely textured soils lower in organic mat-
|
||
ter; use the higher rate for more finely textured soils high in
|
||
organic matter.
|
||
Preplant Incorporated Application
|
||
Apply Outlook and incorporate into the upper (1 to 2 inch-
|
||
es) soil surface up to 2 weeks before planting. Use a
|
||
harrow, rolling cultivator, finishing disk, or other implement
|
||
capable of giving uniform shallow incorporation. Avoid
|
||
deeper incorporation or reduced weed control or crop
|
||
injury may result.
|
||
Preplant Surface Application
|
||
For use in minimum tillage or no-till production systems,
|
||
apply Outlook alone or in tank mixes up to 45 days before
|
||
planting. When making early preplant application (15 to
|
||
45 days before planting), use the highest rate specified for
|
||
the specific soil type. Early preplant applications are not for
|
||
use on coarse-texture soils or in areas where average
|
||
annual rainfall (or rainfall plus irrigation) typically exceeds
|
||
40 inches. Early preplant applications may be applied as
|
||
part of a split application program where the second appli-
|
||
cation is made after planting (use 2/3 of Outlook rate early
|
||
followed by 1/3 of rate after planting). A split application is
|
||
advised when the initial application is made more than
|
||
30 days before planting. Tank mixes with postemergence
|
||
herbicides registered for use on the specific crop such as
|
||
glyphosate, Touchdown
|
||
® herbicide (glyphosate), or
|
||
Gramoxone Inteon® herbicide (paraquat) must be used
|
||
when weeds are present at the time of application.
|
||
Preemergence Surface Application
|
||
Broadcast treatment uniformly to the soil surface after
|
||
planting and before crop emergence. Rainfall, sprinkler
|
||
irrigation, or shallow mechanical incorporation after appli-
|
||
cation is required to move this product into the upper soil
|
||
surface where weed seeds germinate. If adequate rainfall
|
||
or irrigation does not occur and weed seedling emergence
|
||
begins, a shallow cultivation or rotary hoeing will improve
|
||
performance.
|
||
Early Postemergence Application
|
||
Outlook must be applied before weed seedling
|
||
emergence or in a tank mix with products registered for
|
||
use on the specific crop on this label that control the
|
||
emerged weeds. Refer to Crop-specific Information for
|
||
specific postemergence applications by crop.
|
||
Layby Application
|
||
Use Outlook in field corn, seed corn, and popcorn. See
|
||
Crop-specific Information - Corn for more details on
|
||
layby application.
|
||
Split Application
|
||
Outlook may be used in split application programs where
|
||
applications are made as part of the methods described
|
||
above. If applications are less than 2 weeks apart, the total
|
||
Outlook rate used must not exceed the maximum rate
|
||
given for each specific soil type. If applications are 2 weeks
|
||
or more apart, a total Outlook application rate of up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A per year may be used on any soil type in all
|
||
labeled crops except corn, cotton, sugar beet, and
|
||
soybean. See Crop-specific Information section for
|
||
maximum seasonal application rate in corn, cotton, sugar
|
||
beet, and soybean.
|
||
Fall Application
|
||
For use only in the following states:
|
||
Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota,
|
||
Wisconsin, north of Highway 136 in Illinois, and
|
||
north of Highway 91 in Nebraska.
|
||
Outlook may be used in fall applications to control weeds
|
||
in minimum tillage or no-till corn or soybean production
|
||
systems planted the following spring. Apply up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A of Outlook to medium-texture and fine-texture
|
||
soils with greater than 2.5% organic matter.
|
||
Soil Texture
|
||
Organic Matter Content
|
||
Less than 3%
|
||
(fl ozs)
|
||
3% or more
|
||
(fl ozs)
|
||
Coarse 12 to 14 14 to 18
|
||
Medium
|
||
14 to 18 18 to 21
|
||
Fine
|
||
See tank mix descriptions for the specified application rate ranges of
|
||
other herbicides tank mixed with Outlook.
|
||
1 The application rates listed are intended for full-season control of
|
||
targeted weeds. Reduced application rates (8 to 16 fl ozs/A of
|
||
Outlook) may be used where partial control or reduced length of soil
|
||
residual control is required, such as postemergence application, or
|
||
preemergence application where cultivation or sequentially applied
|
||
herbicides will be used for added control of the same targeted weed
|
||
species.
|
||
Use 8 to 12 fl ozs/A of Outlook on coarse-texture soils.
|
||
Use 12 to 16 fl ozs/A of Outlook on medium-texture and fine-texture
|
||
soils.
|
||
2 For all early preplant applications, use 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook.
|
||
3 On muck soils and high organic matter soils, apply Outlook at
|
||
21 fl ozs/A.
|
||
|
||
8
|
||
Fall applications must be made after October 1. Apply
|
||
Outlook® herbicide in the fall after crop harvest when soil
|
||
temperature at the 4-inch depth is sustained at less than
|
||
55º F and before the ground freezes.
|
||
Tillage operations may be conducted before or after apply-
|
||
ing Outlook. If following an application, tillage should be
|
||
no more than 2 to 3 inches deep to uniformly incorporate
|
||
the herbicide into the upper soil surface. If a sequential
|
||
application program (fall application followed by spring
|
||
application of Outlook) is used, the maximum combined
|
||
rate of Outlook that may be applied is 21 fl ozs/A per crop
|
||
season.
|
||
Spray Drift Management
|
||
Avoiding spray drift at the application site is the
|
||
responsibility of the applicator. The interaction of many
|
||
equipment-related and weather-related factors determines
|
||
the potential for spray drift. The applicator and the grower
|
||
are responsible for considering all these factors when
|
||
making decisions. Where states have more stringent regu-
|
||
lations, they must be observed. The applicator should be
|
||
familiar with and take into account the following drift reduc-
|
||
tion advisory information.
|
||
Controlling Droplet Size
|
||
The most effective way to reduce drift potential is to apply
|
||
large droplets that provide sufficient coverage and control.
|
||
Applying larger droplets reduces drift potential but will not
|
||
prevent drift if applications are made improperly or under
|
||
unfavorable environmental conditions (see Wind;
|
||
Temperature and Humidity; and Temperature
|
||
Inversion).
|
||
• Volume - Use high flow rate nozzles to apply the highest
|
||
practical spray volume. Nozzles with higher rated flows
|
||
produce larger droplets.
|
||
• Pressure - DO NOT exceed the nozzle manufacturer’s
|
||
specified pressures. For many nozzle types, lower pres-
|
||
sure produces larger droplets. When higher flow rates are
|
||
needed, use higher flow rate nozzles instead of increas-
|
||
ing pressure.
|
||
• Number of Nozzles - Use the minimum number of noz-
|
||
zles that provide uniform coverage.
|
||
• Nozzle Orientation - Orienting nozzles so spray is
|
||
released parallel to the airstream produces larger droplets
|
||
than other orientations and is preferred practice.
|
||
Significant deflection from the horizontal will reduce
|
||
droplet size and increase drift potential.
|
||
• Nozzle Type - Use a nozzle type designed for the
|
||
intended application. With most nozzle types, narrower
|
||
spray angles produce larger droplets. Consider using
|
||
low-drift nozzles. Solid-stream nozzles oriented straight
|
||
back produce the largest droplets and the lowest drift.
|
||
DO NOT use nozzles producing a mist droplet spray.
|
||
Boom Length
|
||
For some use patterns, reducing the effective boom length
|
||
to less than 3/4 of the wingspan or rotor length may further
|
||
reduce drift without reducing swath width.
|
||
Application Height
|
||
Making applications at the lowest possible height (aircraft,
|
||
ground-driven spray boom) that is safe and practical
|
||
reduces exposure of droplets to evaporation and wind.
|
||
Applications should not be made at a height greater than
|
||
10 feet above the top of the largest plants unless a greater
|
||
height is required for aircraft safety.
|
||
Swath Adjustment
|
||
When applications are made with a crosswind, the swath
|
||
will be displaced downwind. Therefore, on the upwind and
|
||
downwind edges of the field, the applicator must
|
||
compensate for this displacement by adjusting the path of
|
||
the application equipment (e.g. aircraft, ground) upwind.
|
||
Swath adjustment distance should increase with increasing
|
||
drift potential (higher wind, smaller droplets, etc.).
|
||
Wind
|
||
Drift potential is lowest between wind speeds of 3 to
|
||
10 mph. However, many factors, including droplet size and
|
||
equipment type, determine drift potential at any given
|
||
speed. Avoid application below 3 mph because of variable
|
||
wind direction and high inversion potential.
|
||
NOTE: Local terrain can influence wind patterns. Every
|
||
applicator should be familiar with local wind patterns and
|
||
how they affect spray drift.
|
||
Temperature and Humidity
|
||
When making applications in low relative humidity, set up
|
||
equipment to produce larger droplets to compensate for
|
||
evaporation. Droplet evaporation is most severe when con-
|
||
ditions are both hot and dry.
|
||
Temperature Inversion
|
||
Applications should not occur during temperature inversion
|
||
because drift potential is high. Temperature inversions
|
||
restrict vertical air mixing, which causes small suspended
|
||
droplets to remain in a concentrated cloud that can move
|
||
in unpredictable directions because of the light, variable
|
||
winds common during inversions. Temperature inversions
|
||
are characterized by increasing temperatures with altitude
|
||
and are common on nights with limited cloud cover and
|
||
light-to-no wind. They begin to form as the sun sets and
|
||
often continue into the morning. Their presence can be
|
||
indicated by ground fog; however, if fog is not present,
|
||
inversions can also be identified by the movement of
|
||
smoke from a ground source or an aircraft smoke genera-
|
||
tor. Smoke that layers and moves laterally in a
|
||
concentrated cloud (under low wind conditions) indicates
|
||
an inversion, while smoke that moves upward and rapidly
|
||
dissipates indicates good vertical air mixing.
|
||
Sensitive Areas
|
||
Spray drift from applying this product may result in damage
|
||
to sensitive plants adjacent to the treatment area. Only
|
||
apply this product when the potential for drift to these and
|
||
other adjacent sensitive areas (e.g. residential areas,
|
||
bodies of water, known habitat for threatened or
|
||
endangered species, or nontarget crops or plants) is mini-
|
||
mal. DO NOT apply when the following conditions exist
|
||
that increase the likelihood of spray drift from intended
|
||
|
||
9
|
||
targets: high or gusty winds, high temperatures, low
|
||
humidity, temperature inversions.
|
||
Wind Erosion
|
||
Avoid treating powdery, dry, or light sandy soils when
|
||
conditions are favorable for wind erosion. Under these
|
||
conditions, the soil surface should first be settled by rainfall
|
||
or irrigation.
|
||
Aerial Application Method and Equipment
|
||
Water Volume. Use 2 or more gallons of water per acre.
|
||
The actual minimum spray volume per acre is determined
|
||
by the spray equipment used. Use adequate spray volume
|
||
to provide accurate and uniform distribution of spray parti-
|
||
cles over the treated area and to avoid spray drift.
|
||
Managing Spray Drift from Aerial
|
||
Application
|
||
Applicators must follow these requirements to avoid off-
|
||
target drift movement:
|
||
• Boom Length - The distance of the outermost nozzles
|
||
on the boom must not exceed 3/4 the length of the
|
||
wingspan or rotor.
|
||
• Nozzle Orientation - Nozzles must always point back-
|
||
ward parallel with the airstream and never be pointed
|
||
downward more than 45 degrees.
|
||
• Application Height - Without compromising aircraft
|
||
safety, application should be made at a height of 10 feet
|
||
or less above the crop canopy or tallest plants.
|
||
Applicators must follow the most restrictive use cautions to
|
||
avoid drift hazards, including those found in this labeling as
|
||
well as applicable state and local regulations and
|
||
ordinances.
|
||
Ground Application (Banding)
|
||
When applying Outlook® herbicide by banding, calculate
|
||
the amount of herbicide and water volume per acre needed
|
||
using the following formula:
|
||
Ground Application (Broadcast)
|
||
Water Volume. Use 5 or more gallons of water per acre.
|
||
The actual minimum spray volume per acre is determined
|
||
by the spray equipment used. Use adequate spray volume
|
||
for accurate and uniform distribution of spray particles over
|
||
the treated area and to avoid spray drift.
|
||
Cleaning Spray Equipment
|
||
Clean application equipment thoroughly by using a strong
|
||
detergent or commercial sprayer cleaner according to the
|
||
manufacturer’s directions and then triple rinsing the equip-
|
||
ment before and after applying this product.
|
||
Ground Application (Dry Bulk Fertilizer)
|
||
Outlook may be impregnated or coated onto dry bulk
|
||
granular fertilizer carriers for preplant surface, preplant
|
||
incorporated, or preemergence application. Impregnation
|
||
or coating may be conducted by the in-plant bulk system
|
||
or the on-board system. When impregnated onto some dry
|
||
fertilizer blends, Outlook may exhibit a strong odor.
|
||
Perform the mixing operation in a well- ventilated area.
|
||
Outlook may also be applied in herbicide tank mixes
|
||
where the tank mix companion product is also registered
|
||
for these application systems. Individuals or agents selling
|
||
Outlook in these application systems are responsible for
|
||
following all state and local regulations regarding fertilizer
|
||
and herbicide blending.
|
||
Addition of a drying agent may be necessary if the fertilizer
|
||
and herbicide blend is too wet for uniform application
|
||
because of high humidity, high urea concentration, or low
|
||
fertilizer use rate. Slowly add the drying agent to the blend
|
||
until a flowable mixture is obtained. Drying agents are not
|
||
advised for use with on-board impregnation systems.
|
||
Under some conditions, fertilizer impregnated with
|
||
Outlook may clog air tubes or deflector plates on pneu-
|
||
matic application systems. Mineral oil may be added to
|
||
Outlook before blending with fertilizer to reduce plugging.
|
||
DO NOT use drying agents when mineral oil is used. To
|
||
avoid separation of Outlook and mineral oil mixes in cold
|
||
temperatures, either keep mixture heated or agitated
|
||
before blending with fertilizer. Mineral oil may be used at
|
||
in-plant blending stations or on-board injection systems.
|
||
Apply 200 to 750 pounds of the fertilizer and herbicide
|
||
blend per acre. Application must be made uniformly to the
|
||
soil to prevent possible crop injury and for satisfactory
|
||
weed control. Impregnated fertilizer spread at 1/2 rate and
|
||
overlapped to obtain a full rate will offer a more uniform dis-
|
||
tribution. For granular fertilizer application to protect small
|
||
birds and mammals, soil incorporation of the granules is
|
||
required. A shallow (1 to 2 inches) incorporation is desir-
|
||
able for improved weed control. Deeper incorporation may
|
||
result in unsatisfactory weed control.
|
||
Use the following formula to calculate the herbicide rate
|
||
when using dry bulk fertilizer applications:
|
||
Incompatible Mixtures
|
||
DO NOT impregnate Outlook or Outlook mixes on
|
||
ammonium nitrate, potassium nitrate, or sodium nitrate fer-
|
||
tilizers or fertilizer blends. Single superphosphate (0-20-0)
|
||
and triple superphosphate (0-46-0) may be impregnated
|
||
only with Outlook alone.
|
||
bandwidth in inches x
|
||
broadcast
|
||
rate
|
||
per acre
|
||
=
|
||
banding
|
||
herbicide rate
|
||
per acrerow width in inches
|
||
bandwidth in inches x
|
||
broadcast
|
||
volume
|
||
per acre
|
||
=
|
||
banding water
|
||
volume
|
||
per acrerow width in inches
|
||
fl ozs/A x 2,000 = fluid ounces
|
||
per ton of fertilizerfertilizer (lbs/A)
|
||
|
||
10
|
||
Chemigation Application via Sprinkler and
|
||
Drip Irrigation Systems
|
||
Outlook® herbicide may be applied as a chemigation
|
||
treatment through sprinkler irrigation systems. Apply this
|
||
product ONLY through a sprinkler irrigation system of the
|
||
following type: center pivot, end tow, hand move, lateral
|
||
move, side (wheel) roll, or solid set. DO NOT apply this
|
||
product through any other type of sprinkler irrigation
|
||
system.
|
||
Outlook may also be applied as a chemigation treatment
|
||
through drip irrigation systems. All chemigation precautions
|
||
mentioned in this label for sprinkler irrigation systems also
|
||
apply for drip irrigation systems.
|
||
Application may be made alone or in tank mixtures with
|
||
other herbicides on this label registered for use in specified
|
||
sprinkler or drip irrigation systems. Application must be
|
||
made within specific crop stage timings and product use
|
||
rates given in the container label Directions For Use.
|
||
Uniform distribution of Outlook-treated irrigation water is
|
||
the sole responsibility of the applicator and is required to
|
||
avoid crop injury, lack of herbicide effective ness, or illegal
|
||
pesticide residue in the crop. If you have questions about
|
||
calibration, contact State Extension Service specialists,
|
||
equipment manufacturers, or other experts.
|
||
Proper calibration is the responsibility of the applicator. The
|
||
system must be properly calibrated (with water only) to
|
||
ensure the amount of Outlook applied corresponds to the
|
||
specified rate. Apply Outlook in volume minimums of
|
||
0.33 to 0.67 inch of water using the lower volume for
|
||
coarse-texture soils and the higher volume for fine- texture
|
||
soils. Application made in high volumes of water (more
|
||
than 1 inch) may result in reduced weed control.
|
||
Meter herbicide dilution into irrigation water through the
|
||
entire time of water application for center pivot and lateral
|
||
move sprinkler systems. For solid-set and hand-move
|
||
sprinkler irrigation systems and drip irrigation systems,
|
||
apply Outlook through the system at the beginning of the
|
||
set; then follow with additional water to reach volume mini-
|
||
mums as listed by soil type. To increase calibration
|
||
accuracy of injection metering equipment, dilute Outlook
|
||
in a minimum of 3 parts water to 1 part Outlook. Maintain
|
||
agitation in injection nurse tanks to keep a uniform herbi-
|
||
cide suspension during application.
|
||
Special instructions for chemigation:
|
||
1. DO NOT apply when wind speed favors drift beyond the
|
||
area intended for treatment.
|
||
2. DO NOT connect an irrigation system used for pesticide
|
||
application to a public water system unless the pesticide
|
||
label-prescribed safety devices for public water systems
|
||
are in place.
|
||
3. A person knowledgeable of the chemigation system and
|
||
responsible for its operation, or under the supervision of
|
||
the responsible person, shall shut the system down and
|
||
make necessary adjustments should the need arise.
|
||
4. Recirculate and/or contain tail water (runoff water) from
|
||
chemigation that contains Outlook in the field in a
|
||
cistern or holding reservoir from the initial application
|
||
and/or used only on adjacent, approved crops for which
|
||
Outlook is registered for this type of application.
|
||
5. The pesticide injection pipeline must contain a functional,
|
||
automatic, quick-closing check valve to prevent the flow
|
||
of fluid back toward the injection pump. It must also con-
|
||
tain a functional, normally closed, solenoid-operated
|
||
valve located on the intake side of the injection pump and
|
||
connected to the system interlock to prevent fluid from
|
||
being withdrawn from the supply tank when the irrigation
|
||
system is either automatically or manually shut down.
|
||
6. The sprinkler chemigation system must contain a func-
|
||
tional check valve, vacuum-relief valve, and low-pressure
|
||
drain appropriately located on the irrigation pipeline to
|
||
prevent water-source contamination from backflow. In
|
||
addition, systems must use a metering pump, such as a
|
||
positive displacement injection pump (e.g. diaphragm
|
||
pump) effectively designed and constructed of materials
|
||
that are compatible with pesticides and capable of being
|
||
fitted with a system interlock.
|
||
7. The sprinkler chemigation system must contain function-
|
||
al interlocking controls to automatically shut off the
|
||
pesticide injection pump when the water pump motor
|
||
stops, or in cases where there is no water pump, when
|
||
the water pressure decreases to the point where pesti-
|
||
cide distribution is adversely affected.
|
||
8. The irrigation line or water pump must include a
|
||
functional pressure switch that will stop the water pump
|
||
motor when the water pressure decreases to the point
|
||
where pesticide distribution is adversely affected.
|
||
Chemigation systems connected to public water
|
||
systems:
|
||
1. Public water system means a system for the provision to
|
||
the public of piped water for human consumption if such
|
||
system has at least 15 service connections or regularly
|
||
serves an average of at least 25 individuals daily at least
|
||
60 days out of the year.
|
||
2. Chemigation systems connected to public water
|
||
systems must contain a functional, reduced-pressure
|
||
zone backflow preventer (RPZ) or the functional equiva-
|
||
lent in the water supply line upstream from the point of
|
||
pesticide introduction. As an option to the RPZ,
|
||
discharge the water from the public water system into a
|
||
reservoir tank prior to pesticide introduction. There shall
|
||
be a complete physical break (air gap) between the out-
|
||
let end of the fill pipe and the top or overflow rim of the
|
||
reservoir tank of at least twice the inside diameter of the
|
||
fill pipe.
|
||
3. All chemigation systems connected to public water sys-
|
||
tems must also follow restrictions listed in the preceding
|
||
section.
|
||
Additives
|
||
Spray adjuvants have little or no influence on Outlook per-
|
||
formance when application is made before weed
|
||
emergence. However, several tank mixes with Outlook
|
||
require adjuvants to improve burndown of emerged weeds.
|
||
Therefore, surfactants and/or low rate fertilizer [28%, 30%,
|
||
|
||
11
|
||
or 32% urea ammonium nitrate (UAN) or ammonium sulfate
|
||
(AMS)], or crop oil concentrate (COC) may be used with
|
||
Outlook
|
||
® herbicide tank mixes applied preplant, preemer-
|
||
gence, or early postemergence to the crop.
|
||
Follow the adjuvant directions on the tank mix partner’s
|
||
label.
|
||
When an adjuvant (or a specific adjuvant product, such as
|
||
a drift control agent) is to be used with this product, BASF
|
||
recommends the use of a Chemical Producers and
|
||
Distributors Association (CPDA) certified adjuvant for use
|
||
on food crops.
|
||
Oil Concentrate
|
||
A crop oil concentrate must contain either a petroleum-oil
|
||
or vegetable-oil base and must meet all of the following
|
||
criteria:
|
||
• Nonphytotoxic
|
||
• Contain only EPA-exempt ingredients
|
||
• Provide good mixing quality in the jar test
|
||
• Successful in local experience
|
||
The exact composition of suitable products will vary; how-
|
||
ever, vegetable-oil and petroleum-oil concentrates should
|
||
contain emulsifiers to provide good mixing quality.
|
||
Highly refined vegetable oils have proven more satisfactory
|
||
than unrefined vegetable oils. For additional information,
|
||
see Compatibility Test for Mix Components.
|
||
The use of adjuvants containing penetrants, such as
|
||
petroleum-based oils, after corn emergence may cause
|
||
crop injury.
|
||
Nitrogen Source
|
||
Urea Ammonium Nitrate (UAN). Use 1 to 2 gallons of
|
||
UAN (28%, 30%, or 32% nitrogen solution) per acre.
|
||
DO NOT use brass or aluminum nozzles when spraying
|
||
UAN.
|
||
Ammonium Sulfate (AMS). AMS at 8 to 17 pounds per
|
||
100 gallons of spray solution may be substituted for UAN.
|
||
Use high-quality AMS (spray grade) to avoid nozzle plug-
|
||
ging. Other sources of nitrogen are not as effective as
|
||
those mentioned. BASF does not recommend applying
|
||
AMS if applied in less than 10 gallons per acre because of
|
||
potential problems with precipitation in reduced volumes.
|
||
Use AMS only if it has been demonstrated to be successful
|
||
in local experience.
|
||
Nonionic Surfactant (NIS)
|
||
The standard label recommendation is 1 to 2 quarts of an
|
||
80% active (NIS) per 100 gallons of water. For certain
|
||
weeds, a higher spray surfactant rate is advised.
|
||
Tank Mixing Information
|
||
It is the pesticide user’s responsibility to ensure that all
|
||
products in the mixtures are registered for the intended
|
||
use. Read and follow the applicable restrictions and limita-
|
||
tions and directions for use on all product labels involved in
|
||
tank mixing. Users must follow the most restrictive
|
||
directions for use and precautionary statements of each
|
||
product in the tank mixture.
|
||
Outlook may be tank mixed or applied sequentially with
|
||
other herbicide products registered for use in any labeled
|
||
crop found in this label for a broader spectrum of residual
|
||
weed control and/or control of emerged weeds. Refer to
|
||
the tank mix product labels to confirm that the respective
|
||
tank mix products are registered for use on the labeled
|
||
crop. Read and follow tank mix product labels for applica-
|
||
tion instructions, use restrictions and precautions, and
|
||
rotational cropping guidance. Physical incompatibility,
|
||
reduced weed control, or crop injury may result from mix-
|
||
ing Outlook with other pesticides (fungicides, herbicides,
|
||
insecticides, or miticides), additives, or fertilizers. Local
|
||
agricultural authorities may be a source of information
|
||
when using other than BASF-advised tank mixes.
|
||
Compatibility Test for Mix Components
|
||
Before mixing components, always perform a compatibility
|
||
jar test.
|
||
For 20 gallons/A spray volume, use 3.3 cups (800 mL) of
|
||
water. For other spray volumes, adjust rates accordingly.
|
||
Only use water from the intended source at the source
|
||
temperature.
|
||
Add components in the sequence indicated in Mixing
|
||
Order using 2 teaspoons for each pound or 1 teaspoon for
|
||
each pint of label rate per acre.
|
||
Always cap the jar and invert 10 cycles between compo-
|
||
nent additions.
|
||
When the components have all been added to the jar, let
|
||
the solution stand for 15 minutes. Evaluate the solution for
|
||
uniformity and stability. The spray solution should not have
|
||
free oil on the surface, or fine particles that precipitate to
|
||
the bottom, or thick (clabbered) texture. If the spray
|
||
solution is not compatible, repeat the compatibility test with
|
||
the addition of a suitable compatibility agent. If the solution
|
||
is then compatible, use the compatibility agent as directed
|
||
on its label. If the solution is still incompatible, DO NOT mix
|
||
the ingredients in the same tank.
|
||
Mixing Order
|
||
Maintain constant agitation throughout mixing and
|
||
application.
|
||
1. Water - Begin by agitating a thoroughly clean sprayer
|
||
tank 3/4 full of clean water.
|
||
2. Inductor - If an inductor is used, rinse it thoroughly after
|
||
each component has been added.
|
||
3. Products in PVA bags - Place any product contained
|
||
in water-soluble PVA bags into the mixing tank. Wait until
|
||
all water-soluble PVA bags have fully dissolved and the
|
||
product is evenly mixed in the spray tank before
|
||
continuing.
|
||
4. Water-dispersible products (dry flowables, wettable
|
||
powders, suspension concentrates, or suspo- emulsions)
|
||
5. Water-soluble products
|
||
6. Emulsifiable concentrates (such as Outlook or oil
|
||
concentrate when applicable)
|
||
|
||
12
|
||
7. Water-soluble additives (such as AMS or UAN when
|
||
applicable)
|
||
8. Remaining quantity of water
|
||
Use Restrictions
|
||
• Maximum seasonal application rate - DO NOT apply
|
||
more than a total of 0.98 pound of active ingredient
|
||
dimethenamid-P (21 fl ozs of Outlook
|
||
® herbicide) per
|
||
acre per season in all labeled crops except corn, cotton,
|
||
sugar beet, and soybean. See Crop-specific
|
||
Information section for maximum seasonal application
|
||
rate in corn, cotton, sugar beet, and soybean.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) - Refer to Crop-specific
|
||
Information for crop-specific preharvest intervals and
|
||
feeding and grazing restrictions.
|
||
• Outlook is not for sale, distribution, or use in Nassau and
|
||
Suffolk counties in New York State.
|
||
• DO NOT contaminate irrigation ditches or water used for
|
||
domestic purposes.
|
||
Use Precautions
|
||
• Emergency replanting (recropping) intervals
|
||
- If corn, dry bean, grain sorghum, peanut, or soybean
|
||
treated with Outlook are lost to adverse weather or for
|
||
other reasons, the area treated may be replanted to any
|
||
of those crops immediately, unless specified otherwise
|
||
in the Crop-Specific Information section of this label.
|
||
- If the original Outlook treatment was broadcast,
|
||
DO NOT make a second application of Outlook.
|
||
- If the original application was banded and the second
|
||
crop is planted in the row middles, a second band
|
||
application may be applied.
|
||
- If Outlook has been applied to sugar beets, table
|
||
beets, cotton, dry bulb onions, garlic, dry bulb shallots,
|
||
green onions, hops, perennial grass grown for seed,
|
||
horseradish, potato, sweet potato, tuberous and corm
|
||
vegetables, radish, rutabaga, turnip, pumpkin, or winter
|
||
squash and crop failure occurs because of adverse
|
||
weather or other reasons, replant ing (recropping) these
|
||
crops is not advised. If replanting a crop is necessary,
|
||
plant any of the following labeled crops (corn, dry bean,
|
||
grain sorghum, peanut, soybean) where soil application
|
||
of Outlook is registered.
|
||
• Stress - Application to crops under stress because of
|
||
lack of moisture, hail damage, flooding, herbicide injury,
|
||
mechanical injury, or widely fluctuating temperatures may
|
||
result in crop injury.
|
||
Crop Rotation Intervals
|
||
Refer to Table 3 to determine the proper interval between
|
||
Outlook application and the planting of rotational crops.
|
||
Determine the rotational crop interval for tank mix products
|
||
and use the most restrictive interval of all products applied.
|
||
Table 3. Rotational Crop Planting Intervals by
|
||
Outlook Application Rate
|
||
* Cover crops (winter, spring) may be planted after application of Outlook,
|
||
either inter-seeded into the current crop before harvest or after harvest of
|
||
the current crop. Depending on the sensitivity of the sown cover crop to
|
||
Outlook, stand establishment may be reduced. If cover crops are sown
|
||
for conservation purposes prior to a 4-month interval, DO NOT harvest
|
||
as a food or feed crop, or allow livestock to graze cover crops.
|
||
Crop-specific Information
|
||
Beet, Sugar
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management
|
||
program in sugar beet.
|
||
Normal Timing
|
||
Apply Outlook after sugar beets have reached the 2-leaf
|
||
stage (at least 2 fully expanded true leaves) but before
|
||
sugar beets have exceeded the 8-leaf stage. Application at
|
||
2-leaf stage or later may result in temporary leaf injury.
|
||
Application made from preemergence up through
|
||
cotyledon stage of beets may result in significant crop
|
||
injury including possible stand reduction.
|
||
Extended Timing
|
||
Apply Outlook after sugar beets have reached the 9-leaf
|
||
stage but before sugar beets have exceeded the 12-leaf
|
||
stage.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application or two split
|
||
applications. If Outlook is applied only as a single applica-
|
||
tion, DO NOT exceed 21 fl ozs/A. If Outlook is applied in
|
||
two split applications, maintain a minimum of 14 days
|
||
between split applications. DO NOT exceed a seasonal
|
||
total of 24 fl ozs/A of Outlook. If two applications are
|
||
made, apply no more than 12 to 16 fl ozs/A during the first
|
||
application (applied during Normal Timing: 2 true-leaf to
|
||
8 true-leaf stage); then the remainder (8 to 12 fl ozs/A) of
|
||
the seasonal maximum rate during the second application
|
||
(applied during Extended Timing: 9-leaf to 12-leaf true-
|
||
leaf stage).
|
||
Crop
|
||
Outlook Use Rate
|
||
(fl ozs/A)
|
||
< 16 16 to 21
|
||
Rotational Crop Interval
|
||
(months after application)
|
||
Alfalfa 4 6
|
||
Canola (rapeseed) 4 6
|
||
Cotton 4 4
|
||
Peas (dry field, edible) 4 4
|
||
Small grains 4 4
|
||
Cover crops
|
||
(winter, spring)*
|
||
4 6
|
||
Other crops 6 9
|
||
|
||
13
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Harvest only mature beets and tops.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for Normal Timing application:
|
||
60 days
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for Extended Timing applica-
|
||
tion: 95 days
|
||
Sugar Beet Tank Mixes
|
||
Application may be made alone or in tank mixtures with
|
||
other registered herbicides on sugar beet. Crop injury is
|
||
possible when tank mixing other herbicides as well as any
|
||
adjuvants such as methylated seed oils with Outlook
|
||
®
|
||
herbicide. Read and follow the applicable Crop-specific
|
||
Restrictions and Directions For Use on all products
|
||
involved in tank mixing. The most restrictive labeling applies
|
||
to tank mixes.
|
||
Beet, Table (Garden)
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management pro-
|
||
gram in table (garden) beet.
|
||
Apply Outlook after table beets have reached the 2-leaf
|
||
stage (at least 2 fully expanded true leaves) but before
|
||
table beets have exceeded the 6-leaf stage.
|
||
Application at 2-leaf stage or later may result in temporary
|
||
leaf injury. Application made from preemergence up
|
||
through cotyledon stage of table beets may result in signifi-
|
||
cant crop injury including possible stand reduction.
|
||
A total maximum combined rate of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook
|
||
may be applied on any soil type in a single growing season.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in single application or two split
|
||
applications (such as micro-rate programs). If two applica-
|
||
tions are made, maintain a minimum of 14 days between
|
||
split applications. If two applications are made, apply 1/2 to
|
||
2/3 of rate during first application; then the remainder of
|
||
rate during second application. If two applications are
|
||
made, DO NOT exceed a total of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook
|
||
per season.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Harvest only mature beets and tops.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for beets and tops: 60 days
|
||
Field Corn (grain, seed, silage),
|
||
Fresh Sweet Corn, Popcorn
|
||
Use not permitted in California on sweet corn.
|
||
Outlook may be applied preplant surface, preplant incor-
|
||
porated, preemergence, or postemergence to corn up to
|
||
12-inches tall. Corn in this label refers to field corn grown
|
||
for grain, seed, or silage; fresh sweet corn; and popcorn.
|
||
Before applying to seed corn, sweet corn, or popcorn, ver-
|
||
ify with your local seed company (supplier) the Outlook
|
||
selectivity on your inbred line or hybrid to avoid potential
|
||
injury.
|
||
Outlook may also be applied at layby to field corn, seed
|
||
corn, and popcorn. Layby applications are made when
|
||
corn is greater than 12-inches tall but before it is greater
|
||
than 36-inches tall. For layby application for control of late -
|
||
season germinating weeds, apply before weeds emerge
|
||
from soil or in combination with a herbicide(s) and/or culti-
|
||
vation that controls emerged weeds. For best
|
||
performance, direct application beneath the corn canopy.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application or two split
|
||
applications.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
If Outlook is applied in two split applications, maintain a
|
||
minimum of 14 days between split applications, and
|
||
DO NOT exceed a seasonal total of 24 fl ozs/A of
|
||
Outlook. If two applications are made, apply no more than
|
||
8 to 16 fl ozs/A during the first application (applied
|
||
preplant, preemergence, or postemergence); then apply
|
||
the remainder (8 to 16 fl ozs/A) of the seasonal maximum
|
||
rate during the second application (postemergence, layby).
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Corn may be grazed or fed to livestock 40 days or more
|
||
after application of Outlook.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for sweet corn ears: 50 days
|
||
• DO NOT make layby application of Outlook to sweet
|
||
corn.
|
||
Corn Tank Mixes
|
||
Refer to the tank mix product labels to confirm the respec-
|
||
tive tank mix products are registered for use on specific
|
||
corn types. Not all corn products are registered for use on
|
||
seed corn, popcorn, and sweet corn.
|
||
Glyphosate-resistant Corn Programs
|
||
Outlook may be used preemergence and postemergence
|
||
to glyphosate-resistant corn hybrids. Refer to a glyphosate
|
||
product label for specific weeds controlled post emergence.
|
||
Sequential Program
|
||
Outlook may be applied preemergence at 12 fl ozs/A in a
|
||
planned preemergence followed by glyphosate postemer-
|
||
gence sequential program.
|
||
Postemergence Tank Mix Program
|
||
Outlook may be applied at 12 fl ozs/A in a postemergence
|
||
tank mix with glyphosate to corn up to 12-inches tall.
|
||
Layby application may also be made when corn is greater
|
||
than 12-inches tall but before it is greater than 36-inches
|
||
tall. Drop nozzles are required when corn is 30-inches to
|
||
36-inches tall. Labeled use rates for this tank mix are listed
|
||
in Table 4. This tank mix with glyphosate should be applied
|
||
when weeds are 2 inches to 4 inches in height and before
|
||
weed height and/or density become competitive with the
|
||
crop.
|
||
|
||
14
|
||
Table 4. Broadcast Application Rate per Acre
|
||
Cotton
|
||
Use not permitted in California on cotton.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied postemergence to cotton for
|
||
residual weed control. Before applying to cotton, verify with
|
||
your local seed company (supplier) the selectivity of
|
||
Outlook on your variety to avoid potential injury.
|
||
Use of Outlook may result in temporary growth suppres-
|
||
sion in cotton if extreme conditions of high rainfall and
|
||
extended periods of water-saturated soil occur during cot-
|
||
ton germination or early seedling development.
|
||
Application Rate and Timing
|
||
Outlook may be applied in either a single postemergence
|
||
application (see Single Application section) or in sequen-
|
||
tial postemergence applications (see Sequential
|
||
Applications section).
|
||
Early Postemergence Application
|
||
Outlook must be applied before weed seedling
|
||
emergence or in a tank mix with products registered for
|
||
use on cotton that control the emerged weeds. For effec-
|
||
tive residual activity, rainfall, sprinkler irrigation, or shallow
|
||
mechanical incorporation after application is required to
|
||
move this product into the upper soil surface where weed
|
||
seeds germinate.
|
||
Outlook will provide residual control of weeds germinating
|
||
after application. Weeds that are emerged at time of appli-
|
||
cation must be controlled with cultivation, or a tank mix or
|
||
sequential application of another herbicide labeled for
|
||
postemergence weed control in cotton.
|
||
Outlook application to emerged cotton may result in tem-
|
||
porary leaf burn, spotting, and/or stunting, but a reduction
|
||
in cotton yield is not expected.
|
||
Adjuvants may be applied with Outlook when making early
|
||
postemergence application.
|
||
Single application. Apply Outlook at up to 21 fl ozs/A as
|
||
a broadcast spray to cotton from first true leaf stage to the
|
||
mid-bloom stage (i.e. two weeks after R1 initial bloom
|
||
stage). DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook in
|
||
a single application.
|
||
Sequential application. Outlook may be applied as split
|
||
applications when both the initial and sequential application
|
||
is made early postemergence. With the initial application,
|
||
apply Outlook very early postemergence (typically from
|
||
first true leaf stage to 6 to 10 leaf stage) at 12 to 18 fl ozs/A
|
||
as a broadcast spray to cotton. For the sequential applica-
|
||
tion, apply Outlook early postemergence (up to the
|
||
mid-bloom stage, i.e. two weeks after R1 initial bloom
|
||
stage) at 13 to 19 fl ozs/A as a broadcast spray to cotton.
|
||
Sequential applications must be separated by at least
|
||
14 days. DO NOT apply more than 31 fl ozs/A of Outlook
|
||
from early postemergence applications.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply preplant surface, preplant incorporated,
|
||
or preemergence in cotton.
|
||
• DO NOT apply more than a maximum cumulative
|
||
amount of 31 fl ozs/A of Outlook per year.
|
||
• There is no required (preharvest) interval between a
|
||
postemergence application of Outlook and the harvest
|
||
of cotton.
|
||
• Cotton gin byproducts may be fed to livestock.
|
||
Cotton Tank Mixes
|
||
Tank mixing Outlook with other emulsifiable concentrate
|
||
(EC) formulated products may enhance potential for cotton
|
||
injury response.
|
||
Dry Bean
|
||
Use not permitted in California on dry bean.
|
||
Outlook may be applied preplant surface, preplant incor-
|
||
porated, preemergence, or early postemergence (first to
|
||
third trifoliate stage) to dry bean classes (black turtle soup,
|
||
cranberry, dry lima, great northern, navy, pink, pinto, red
|
||
kidney, red Mexican, and small whites). Outlook may only
|
||
be applied preplant surface or preemergence to garbanzo
|
||
beans and lentils. Outlook is not registered for use in suc-
|
||
culent beans, succulent bean varieties grown for seed, or
|
||
cowpeas.
|
||
Before applying Outlook to dry beans, verify with your
|
||
local seed company (supplier) the selectivity of Outlook on
|
||
your specific dry bean class and variety to help avoid
|
||
potential injury to sensitive classes or varieties.
|
||
If extreme conditions of high rainfall and extended periods
|
||
of water-saturated soil occur during dry edible bean germi-
|
||
nation or early seedling development, Outlook use may
|
||
result in temporary growth suppression. This suppression
|
||
will not reduce dry edible bean yield. Outlook use
|
||
postemergence may occasionally result in some temporary
|
||
spotting or browning of dry bean leaves and stunting, but a
|
||
reduction in dry bean yield is unexpected. Postemergence
|
||
tank mixtures with other crop protection products or
|
||
adjuvants may significantly enhance this effect. Depending
|
||
on growing conditions, recovery from this injury begins
|
||
immediately but may take several weeks for dry beans to
|
||
recover completely.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application of up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A or used in split applications of 10 to 14 fl ozs/A
|
||
of Outlook applied initially, and the remaining 7 to
|
||
11 fl ozs/A of Outlook in the sequential application.
|
||
Soil Texture
|
||
Group
|
||
Outlook® herbicide
|
||
(fl ozs) glyphosate
|
||
Coarse 10 to 12 labeled rate
|
||
Medium 12 to 14 labeled rate
|
||
Fine 12 to 16 labeled rate
|
||
|
||
15
|
||
DO NOT exceed a total of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook®
|
||
herbicide per season.
|
||
Additional restrictions specific to dry beans are to use a
|
||
maximum of 12 fl ozs/A of Outlook on coarse soils with
|
||
organic matter less than 1.5% for soil applications made
|
||
before crop emergence.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply Outlook early postemergence to dry
|
||
beans grown in the states of Washington and Oregon
|
||
(EXCEPTION: Malheur county).
|
||
• DO NOT apply Outlook early postemergence by chemi-
|
||
gation to dry beans grown in Idaho or Malheur County,
|
||
Oregon.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 70 days
|
||
Dry Bean Tank Mixes
|
||
The following herbicide products may only be applied
|
||
sequentially with Outlook:
|
||
• Dual II Magnum® herbicide
|
||
• Dual Magnum® herbicide
|
||
Dry Bulb Onions, Garlic, Dry Bulb Shallots
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management pro-
|
||
gram in dry bulb onions, garlic, and dry bulb shallots grown
|
||
in muck soils, high organic soils, and in mineral soils.
|
||
Apply Outlook after dry bulb onions, garlic, and dry bulb
|
||
shallots have reached the 2 true-leaf stage until a minimum
|
||
of 30 days before harvest. Application made before
|
||
2 true-leaf stage may result in significant crop injury includ-
|
||
ing possible stand reduction. If applications are made to
|
||
transplanted dry bulb onions, garlic, and dry bulb shallots,
|
||
DO NOT apply until transplants are in the ground and soil
|
||
has settled around transplants with several days to recover.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application of up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A or used in split applications of 10 to 14 fl ozs/A
|
||
of Outlook applied initially, and the remaining 7 to
|
||
11 fl ozs/A of Outlook in the sequential application. If split
|
||
applications are made, maintain a minimum of 14 days
|
||
between sequential applications. DO NOT apply more than
|
||
a total of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook in a single growing
|
||
season.
|
||
A total maximum combined rate of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook
|
||
may be applied on any soil type in a single growing season.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 30 days
|
||
Dry Bulb Onions, Garlic, Dry Bulb Shallots
|
||
Tank Mixes
|
||
Crop injury is possible when tank mixing other herbicides
|
||
as well as any adjuvants such as methylated seed oils with
|
||
Outlook. Read and follow the applicable Crop-specific
|
||
Restrictions and Directions For Use on all products
|
||
involved in tank mixing. The most restrictive labeling applies
|
||
to tank mixes.
|
||
Fallow
|
||
Outlook may be used as a residual treatment to control
|
||
listed weeds before they germinate at the beginning of the
|
||
fallow period. Specific rotational crop planting intervals
|
||
must be observed between an application of Outlook and
|
||
planting of the following crops (see Crop Rotation
|
||
Intervals section).
|
||
Application Rate and Timing
|
||
Apply Outlook as a broadcast spray at up to 21 fl ozs/A
|
||
before weeds emerge for best product performance.
|
||
Split applications may be made with a minimum of 30 days
|
||
between applications; but DO NOT exceed the maximum
|
||
seasonal cumulative amount of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook per
|
||
cropping season.
|
||
Use not permitted in California on green onions.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management pro-
|
||
gram in green onions grown in muck soils, high organic
|
||
soils, and mineral soils. Outlook may only be applied by
|
||
ground (broadcast) application.
|
||
Apply Outlook after green onions have reached the 2 true-
|
||
leaf stage until a minimum of 30 days before harvest.
|
||
Application made before 2 true-leaf stage may result in sig-
|
||
nificant crop injury including possible stand reduction. If
|
||
applications are made to transplanted green onions,
|
||
DO NOT apply until transplants are in the ground and soil
|
||
has settled around transplants with several days to recover.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application of up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A or used in split applications of 10 to 14 fl ozs/A
|
||
of Outlook applied initially, and the remaining 7 to
|
||
11 fl ozs/A of Outlook in the sequential application. If split
|
||
applications are made, maintain a minimum of 14 days
|
||
between sequential applications. DO NOT apply more than
|
||
a total of 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook in a single growing
|
||
season.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 30 days
|
||
Green Onions
|
||
(Leeks, Spring onions or
|
||
Scallions, Japanese bunching onions,
|
||
Green shallots or Eschalots)
|
||
|
||
Green Onion Tank Mixes
|
||
Outlook® herbicide application may be made before, in
|
||
tank mixture, or after use of registered herbicides for poste-
|
||
mergence use in green onions.
|
||
Crop injury is possible when tank mixing herbicides as well
|
||
as any adjuvants such as methylated seed oils with
|
||
Outlook. Read and follow the applicable Crop-specific
|
||
Restrictions and Directions For Use on all products
|
||
involved in tank mixing. The most restrictive labeling applies
|
||
to tank mixes.
|
||
Hops
|
||
Use not permitted in California on hops.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management pro-
|
||
gram in baby (first year planting) and established hops.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied by ground (banded)
|
||
application (including postemergence-directed). Contact
|
||
with hop foliage or cones by spray mixture or drift may
|
||
cause injury. Apply Outlook preemergence to weeds when
|
||
hops are in the dormant or early vegetative stages of
|
||
growth.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied in single application.
|
||
Outlook has not been tested on hops grown in all soil tex-
|
||
tures. Refer to Table 2 for soil texture group descriptions
|
||
and appropriate application rates. BASF recommends
|
||
testing Outlook on a small portion of the target crop to
|
||
confirm safety in the local soil type.
|
||
Depending on application timing, Outlook may negatively
|
||
impact growth of cover crops planted in the fall after
|
||
harvest.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply to hops by air or through any type of irri-
|
||
gation system.
|
||
• DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook per
|
||
season.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 60 days
|
||
Tank Mixes
|
||
Tank mixes with other herbicides, fungicides, insecticides,
|
||
and fertilizers are not advised when using this product in
|
||
hops.
|
||
Peanut
|
||
Use not permitted in California on peanut.
|
||
Outlook may be applied preplant surface, preplant incor-
|
||
porated, preemergence, or postemergence (up to 80 days
|
||
before harvest) alone or in tank mix combination. Use high-
|
||
er rates (16 to 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook) for improved control
|
||
or suppression of difficult weeds like yellow nutsedge,
|
||
Florida beggarweed, eclipta, common ragweed, and other
|
||
broadleaf species.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application of up to
|
||
21 fl ozs/A or used in split applications of 10 to 14 fl ozs/A
|
||
of Outlook applied initially, and the remaining 7 to
|
||
11 fl ozs/A of Outlook in the sequential application.
|
||
DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook per
|
||
season.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Peanut hay or straw may be grazed or fed to livestock
|
||
80 days or more after application of Outlook.
|
||
Perennial Grass grown for Seed
|
||
For use on perennial grass grown for seed only in
|
||
states west of the Mississippi River.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management
|
||
program in established stands of cool- season and warm-
|
||
season perennial grass grown for seed. Grass seed crops
|
||
must have been established for at least one year or had at
|
||
least one seed crop harvested before Outlook use.
|
||
The grass seed screenings remaining after processing and
|
||
grass straw remaining after seed harvest may be grazed by
|
||
or fed to livestock.
|
||
Outlook applied as directed will provide preemergence
|
||
control or suppression of volunteer seedlings from previous
|
||
grass seed crops in addition to many annual grass weeds,
|
||
annual broadleaf weeds, and sedge listed in Table 1.
|
||
In cool-season perennial grass, apply 14 to 21 fl ozs/A of
|
||
Outlook to postharvest grass during regrowth in the fall or
|
||
spring before emergence of targeted weeds. Outlook may
|
||
be applied in a sequential use program with other
|
||
herbicides that control emerged weeds. Application to
|
||
perennial ryegrass and fine fescue stands under stress may
|
||
cause crop injury.
|
||
In warm-season perennial grass, apply 14 to 21 fl ozs/A of
|
||
Outlook to postharvest grass during the fall, or during win-
|
||
ter dormancy, or after the first seed harvest/cutting.
|
||
DO NOT apply to warm-season perennial grass after
|
||
greenup in the spring before the first seed harvest/cutting.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a sequential use program with
|
||
other herbicides that control emerged weeds.
|
||
In both cool-season and warm- season perennial grass, use
|
||
the higher rate in the rate range where more dense
|
||
infestations of targeted annual grass weeds, annual
|
||
broadleaf weeds, or sedge are expected. Grass straw from
|
||
the previous harvest must be removed, burned, or evenly
|
||
spread before Outlook application or reduced weed con-
|
||
trol may result.
|
||
For effective control or suppression of annual grass weeds,
|
||
annual broadleaf weeds, sedge, or volunteer seedlings
|
||
from previous grass seed crops, this product must be
|
||
moved into the upper soil surface where weed seeds
|
||
germinate by rainfall or irrigation before weed emergence.
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
17
|
||
Application made in periods of cold temperature that tem-
|
||
porarily limit normal crop growth or in extended cold
|
||
temperature periods that initiate winter dormancy in grass
|
||
crops may result in crop injury.
|
||
Outlook
|
||
® herbicide may be tank mixed with other herbi-
|
||
cides labeled for use in perennial grass grown for seed.
|
||
BASF recommends testing Outlook tank mixes on a small
|
||
portion of the target crop to determine if damage is likely to
|
||
occur. Physical incompatibility, reduced weed control,
|
||
or crop injury may result from mixing Outlook with
|
||
other pesticides (fungicides, herbicides, insecticides,
|
||
or miticides), additives, or fertilizers. Subsequent appli-
|
||
cation of postemergence herbicides may cause crop injury.
|
||
Consult with your local BASF dealer regarding local tank
|
||
mix options.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply a total of more than 21 fl ozs/A of
|
||
Outlook per growing season.
|
||
• From treated fields of cool-season perennial grass, forage
|
||
and hay may be grazed by or fed to livestock 60 days
|
||
after application.
|
||
• From treated fields of warm-season perennial grass, for-
|
||
age and hay may be grazed by or fed to livestock
|
||
30 days after application.
|
||
Potato, Sweet Potato, Horseradish
|
||
Use not permitted on horseradish and sweet potato
|
||
in California.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management
|
||
program in horse radish, potato, and sweet potato.
|
||
In potato and sweet potato, apply Outlook preemergence
|
||
(after planting or after drag-off). In horseradish, apply
|
||
Outlook postemergence from the 2-leaf stage to the 8-leaf
|
||
stage of plant development. Outlook may only be applied
|
||
in a single application in horseradish, potato, and sweet
|
||
potato.
|
||
In cold and wet growing conditions, Outlook application
|
||
may result in delayed emergence or early season stunting
|
||
of horseradish, potato, and sweet potato.
|
||
Outlook use can cause crop injury to sweet potatoes.
|
||
Apply Outlook preemergence only. Apply Outlook so as
|
||
not to come into contact with developing tubers. The
|
||
option of applying Outlook for weed control rather than
|
||
crop injury should be based on potential crop loss because
|
||
of weed infestations compared to potential loss from crop
|
||
injury. Test Outlook on a portion of the crop to determine if
|
||
the use of Outlook is suitable for the intended results.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter con-
|
||
tent. DO NOT exceed the specified rate by soil type and
|
||
organic matter content in a single application.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 40 days
|
||
Sorghum (Grain)
|
||
Outlook may be used preplant surface, preplant incorpo-
|
||
rated, preemergence, or postemergence to grain sorghum
|
||
up to 12-inches tall. Single or split application may be
|
||
used.
|
||
Outlook is not registered for use on sweet or forage
|
||
sorghum.
|
||
All Outlook applications must only be made to sorghum
|
||
seed that has been properly treated by the seed company
|
||
with an approved chloroacetamide herbicide safener or
|
||
severe injury may occur.
|
||
Under high soil moisture or cool conditions, Outlook appli-
|
||
cation may cause temporary stunting or leaf wrapping of
|
||
sorghum. Sorghum will normally outgrow these symptoms
|
||
in 10 to 14 days.
|
||
For best performance, make preemergence surface
|
||
application within 5 days of the last preplant tillage. If
|
||
weeds have emerged, apply Outlook with herbicides to
|
||
control emerged vegetation.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Sorghum forage may be grazed or fed to livestock
|
||
60 days or more after application of Outlook.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for grain and fodder: 80 days
|
||
• DO NOT apply preplant incorporated in California.
|
||
Soybean
|
||
Use not permitted in California on soybean.
|
||
Outlook may be applied preplant surface, preplant incor-
|
||
porated, preemergence, or postemergence [from
|
||
emergence (cracking stage) to fifth-trifoliate leaf stage] to
|
||
soybean.
|
||
If Outlook is applied preplant incorporated, incorporation
|
||
must be uniform and shallow (upper 1 to 2 inches of soil).
|
||
Deeper incorporation may reduce weed control or increase
|
||
the potential for crop injury. Preplant incorporated
|
||
treatments are not for use on coarse soils with less than
|
||
1.5% organic matter.
|
||
If extreme conditions of high rainfall and extended periods
|
||
of water-saturated soil occur during soybean germination
|
||
or early seedling development, Outlook use may result in
|
||
temporary growth suppression.
|
||
Temporary soybean burn and/or stunting may occur with
|
||
postemergence applications of Outlook. Tank mixtures
|
||
with other herbicides not listed in the Soybean Tank
|
||
Mixes section and/or spray adjuvants may increase the
|
||
level of crop injury. Crop injury is typically transient and has
|
||
not resulted in reduced soybean yield potential.
|
||
Outlook may be applied in a single application or two split
|
||
applications.
|
||
|
||
18
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook® herbicide depending on soil type and organic
|
||
matter content.
|
||
If Outlook is applied only as a single application, DO NOT
|
||
apply more than 21 fl ozs/A. If Outlook is applied in two
|
||
split applications, maintain a minimum of 14 days between
|
||
split applications, and DO NOT exceed a seasonal total of
|
||
24 fl ozs/A of Outlook. If two applications are made, apply
|
||
no more than 8 to 16 fl ozs/A during the first application
|
||
(applied preplant, preemergence, or postemergence); then
|
||
apply the remainder (8 to 16 fl ozs/A) of the seasonal maxi-
|
||
mum rate during the second application (postemergence).
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT graze or feed forage, hay, or straw to livestock.
|
||
Tuberous and Corm Vegetables
|
||
Use not permitted in California on tuberous and corm
|
||
vegetables.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management pro-
|
||
gram in the following tuberous and corm vegetables:
|
||
arracacha, arrowroot, Chinese and Jerusalem artichoke,
|
||
edible canna, bitter and sweet cassava, root chayote,
|
||
chufa, dasheen, ginger, leren, tanier, turmeric, yam bean,
|
||
true yam.
|
||
In tuberous and corm vegetables, apply Outlook pre-
|
||
emergence (after planting or after drag-off).
|
||
In cold and wet growing conditions, Outlook application
|
||
may result in delayed emergence or early season stunting
|
||
of tuberous and corm vegetables.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied in a single application in
|
||
tuberous and corm vegetables.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 40 days
|
||
Turnip, Radish, Rutabaga
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management
|
||
program in radish, rutabaga, and turnip.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied by ground (broadcast)
|
||
application.
|
||
Apply Outlook after rutabaga and turnip have reached the
|
||
2-leaf stage (at least 2 fully expanded true leaves) but
|
||
before rutabaga and turnip have exceeded the 8-leaf
|
||
stage. Application at 2-leaf stage or later may result in tem-
|
||
porary leaf injury. Application made from preemergence
|
||
through cotyledon stage of rutabaga and turnip may result
|
||
in significant crop injury including possible stand reduction.
|
||
Apply Outlook after radish has reached the 2-leaf stage
|
||
(at least 2 fully expanded true leaves) but before radish
|
||
has exceeded the 4-leaf stage. Application at 2-leaf to
|
||
4-leaf stage may result in temporary leaf injury. Application
|
||
made from preemergence through cotyledon stage of
|
||
radish may result in significant crop injury including possible
|
||
stand reduction.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied in single application.
|
||
Refer to Table 2 for specific maximum application rates of
|
||
Outlook depending on soil type and organic matter
|
||
content.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply to radish, rutabaga, and turnip by air or
|
||
through any type of irrigation system.
|
||
• DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook per
|
||
season.
|
||
• Harvest only mature tops and roots of radish, rutabaga,
|
||
and turnip.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for rutabaga and turnip tops:
|
||
14 days
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for rutabaga and turnip roots:
|
||
40 days
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI) for radish tops and roots:
|
||
21 days
|
||
Tank Mixes
|
||
Tank mixes with other herbicides or insecticides are not
|
||
advised when applying this product in radish, rutabaga,
|
||
and turnip.
|
||
Winter Squash, Pumpkin
|
||
For use only in Oregon and Washington.
|
||
Outlook may be used as part of a weed management
|
||
program in pumpkin and winter squash
|
||
(Golden Delicious variety only).
|
||
Outlook may only be applied by ground (broadcast)
|
||
application.
|
||
Apply Outlook as a preemergence surface application.
|
||
Broadcast the treatment uniformly to the soil surface after
|
||
planting and before crop and weed emergence. If extreme
|
||
conditions of high rainfall and extended periods of water-
|
||
saturated soil occur during pumpkin or winter squash
|
||
germination or early seedling development, Outlook use
|
||
may result in growth suppression, which may reduce
|
||
yields.
|
||
Outlook may only be applied in single application.
|
||
Apply a minimum of 12 to 14 fl ozs/A of O utlook on soils
|
||
with less than 3% organic matter. Apply a minimum of
|
||
16 to 18 fl ozs/A on soils with greater than 3% organic
|
||
matter. DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook
|
||
on any soil in a single application.
|
||
|
||
19
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply to pumpkin or winter squash by air or
|
||
through any type of irrigation system.
|
||
• DO NOT apply when conditions favor drift to adjacent
|
||
susceptible vegetation.
|
||
• DO NOT apply more than 21 fl ozs/A of Outlook®
|
||
herbicide per year in pumpkin or winter squash.
|
||
• Preharvest Interval (PHI): 90 days
|
||
Tank Mixes
|
||
Tank mixes with other herbicides or insecticides are not
|
||
advised when using this product in pumpkin or winter
|
||
squash.
|
||
|
||
20
|
||
Outlook is a registered trademark of BASF.
|
||
Dual II Magnum and Dual Magnum are registered trade-
|
||
marks of a Syngenta Group Company.
|
||
Dual Magnum® herbicide (s-metolachlor),
|
||
EPA Reg. No. 100-816
|
||
Dual II Magnum® herbicide (s-metolachlor),
|
||
EPA Reg. No. 100-818
|
||
© 2019 BASF Corporation
|
||
All rights reserved.
|
||
007969-00156.20180131b.NVA 2018-04-086-0016
|
||
Supersedes: NVA 2017-04-086-0063
|
||
Supplemental: NVA 2018-04-086-0015
|
||
BASF Corporation
|
||
26 Davis Drive
|
||
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
|
||
Conditions of Sale and Warranty
|
||
The Directions For Use of this product reflect the
|
||
opinion of experts based on field use and tests. The
|
||
directions are believed to be reliable and must be followed
|
||
carefully. However, it is impossible to eliminate all risks
|
||
inherently associated with the use of this product. Crop
|
||
injury, ineffectiveness or other unintended consequences
|
||
may result because of such factors as weather conditions,
|
||
presence of other materials, or use of the product in a
|
||
manner inconsistent with its labeling, all of which are
|
||
beyond the control of BASF CORPORATION (“BASF”) or
|
||
the Seller. To the extent consistent with applicable law, all
|
||
such risks shall be assumed by the Buyer.
|
||
BASF warrants that this product conforms to the chemical
|
||
description on the label and is reasonably fit for the
|
||
purposes referred to in the Directions For Use, subject
|
||
to the inherent risks, referred to above.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH APPLICABLE
|
||
LAW, BASF MAKES NO OTHER EXPRESS OR
|
||
IMPLIED WARRANTY OF FITNESS OR
|
||
MERCHANTABILITY OR ANY OTHER EXPRESS OR
|
||
IMPLIED WARRANTY.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH APPLICABLE
|
||
LAW, BUYER’S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY AND BASF’S
|
||
EXCLUSIVE LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT,
|
||
TORT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY, OR
|
||
OTHERWISE, SHALL BE LIMITED TO REPAYMENT
|
||
OF THE PURCHASE PRICE OF THE PRODUCT.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH APPLICABLE
|
||
LAW, BASF AND THE SELLER DISCLAIM ANY
|
||
LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL, EXEMPLARY,
|
||
SPECIAL OR INDIRECT DAMAGES RESULTING
|
||
FROM THE USE OR HANDLING OF THIS PRODUCT.
|
||
BASF and the Seller offer this product, and the Buyer and
|
||
User accept it, subject to the foregoing Conditions of
|
||
Sale and Warranty which may be varied only by
|
||
agreement in writing signed by a duly authorized
|
||
representative of BASF.
|
||
1108
|
||
|
||
BASF Corporation
|
||
26 Davis Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
|
||
|
||
Supplemental Label
|
||
|
||
Increased rate for early postemergence sequential applications in cotton
|
||
This supplemental label expires November 30, 2022, and must not be used or distributed after this date.
|
||
Active Ingredient*:
|
||
dimethenamid-P: (S)-2-chloro-N-[(1-methyl-2-methoxy)ethyl]-
|
||
N-(2,4-dimethyl-thien-3-yl)-acetamide ............................................................................................................. 63.9%
|
||
Other Ingredients**: ....................................................................................................................................... 36.1%
|
||
Total: ............................................................................................................................................................... 100.0%
|
||
* Contains 6.0 pounds of active ingredient per gallon
|
||
** Contains petroleum distillates
|
||
|
||
EPA Reg. No. 7969-156
|
||
KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN
|
||
WARNING/AVISO
|
||
|
||
Directions For Use
|
||
• It is a violation of federal law to use this product in a
|
||
manner inconsistent with its labeling.
|
||
• The supplemental labeling and the entire
|
||
Outlook® herbicide container label, EPA Reg.
|
||
No. 7969-156, must be in possession of the user at
|
||
the time of application.
|
||
• Read the label affixed to the container for Outlook
|
||
before applying.
|
||
• Use of Outlook according to this labeling is subject
|
||
to the use precautions and restrictions imposed by
|
||
the label affixed to the container for Outlook.
|
||
Product Information
|
||
Outlook is a selective preemergence herbicide for
|
||
controlling annual broadleaf weeds, annual grass
|
||
weeds, and sedges. Refer to the Outlook container
|
||
label for a complete list of weeds controlled.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Application Information
|
||
Early Postemergence Application
|
||
Outlook may be applied as split applications when
|
||
both the initial and sequential application is made early
|
||
postemergence. With the initial application, apply
|
||
Outlook very early postemergence (typically from first
|
||
true leaf stage to 6 to 10 leaf stage) at 12 to 18 fl ozs/A
|
||
as a broadcast spray to cotton. For the sequential
|
||
application, apply Outlook early postemergence (up to
|
||
the mid-bloom stage, i.e. two weeks after R1 initial
|
||
bloom stage) at 13 to 19 fl ozs/A as a broadcast spray
|
||
to cotton. Sequential applications must be separated by
|
||
at least 14 days. DO NOT apply more than 31 fl ozs/A
|
||
of Outlook from early postemergence applications.
|
||
Crop-specific Restrictions
|
||
• DO NOT apply more than a maximum cumulative
|
||
amount of 31 fl ozs/A of Outlook per year.
|
||
• DO NOT apply preplant surface, preplant
|
||
incorporated, or preemergence in cotton.
|
||
• There is no required (preharvest) interval between a
|
||
postemergence application of Outlook and the
|
||
harvest of cotton.
|
||
• Cotton gin byproducts may be fed to livestock.
|
||
|
||
Dimethenamid-P Group 15 Herbicide
|
||
|
||
11/29/2019
|
||
7969-156
|
||
|
||
2
|
||
Conditions of Sale and Warranty
|
||
The Directions For Use of this product reflect the
|
||
opinion of experts based on field use and tests. The
|
||
directions are believed to be reliable and must be
|
||
followed carefully. However, it is impossible to
|
||
eliminate all risks inherently associated with the use
|
||
of this product. Crop injury, ineffectiveness or other
|
||
unintended consequences may result because of
|
||
such factors as weather conditions, presence of
|
||
other materials, or use of the product in a manner
|
||
inconsistent with its labeling, all of which are
|
||
beyond the control of BASF CORPORATION
|
||
(“BASF”) or the Seller. To the extent consistent with
|
||
applicable law, all such risks shall be assumed by
|
||
the Buyer.
|
||
BASF warrants that this product conforms to the
|
||
chemical description on the label and is reasonably
|
||
fit for the purposes referred to in the Directions For
|
||
Use, subject to the inherent risks, referred to above.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH
|
||
APPLICABLE LAW, BASF MAKES NO OTHER
|
||
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY OF
|
||
FITNESS OR MERCHANTABILITY OR ANY
|
||
OTHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH
|
||
APPLICABLE LAW, BUYER’S EXCLUSIVE
|
||
REMEDY AND BASF’S EXCLUSIVE LIABILITY,
|
||
WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT, NEGLIGENCE,
|
||
STRICT LIABILITY, OR OTHERWISE, SHALL BE
|
||
LIMITED TO REPAYMENT OF THE PURCHASE
|
||
PRICE OF THE PRODUCT.
|
||
TO THE EXTENT CONSISTENT WITH
|
||
APPLICABLE LAW, BASF AND THE SELLER
|
||
DISCLAIM ANY LIABILITY FOR
|
||
CONSEQUENTIAL, EXEMPLARY, SPECIAL OR
|
||
INDIRECT DAMAGES RESULTING FROM THE
|
||
USE OR HANDLING OF THIS PRODUCT.
|
||
BASF and the Seller offer this product, and the
|
||
Buyer and User accept it, subject to the foregoing
|
||
Conditions of Sale and Warranty which may be
|
||
varied only by agreement in writing signed by a duly
|
||
authorized representative of BASF.
|
||
1108
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Outlook is a registered trademark of BASF.
|
||
|
||
|
||
© 2019 BASF Corporation
|
||
All rights reserved.
|
||
|
||
007969-00156.20180131b.NVA 2018-04-086-0015
|
||
|
||
BASF Corporation
|
||
26 Davis Drive
|
||
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
|