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St. Henry, Indiana | I was post spraying my soybeans last week and noticed pretty heavy dicamba damage to 70 acres of my beans. My dad did not vacuum the drill out when he started planting. A few extend beans were left in the drill making the damage very distinguishable. I am a DSM for a seed company and sell a lot of extends, personally i have no problem with them and have a few acres of them that were treated as roundup beans. I like my neighbor and he came over and took responsibility for the damage. He said we could settle up this fall off of aph difference. I am worried they will not grow anymore and that I will have a field of water hemp and foxtail. I told him that was fine and that I would not call the state chemist. I walked a lot of extend damage last year but cannot get a definitive answer on the final yield. It really is hard to quantify. What would you guys do?
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