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Indiana | Chemist will contact neighbors by phone and ask them to report spray records by email. Then chemist will come out to collect lab samples. After a week or 2 you’ll hear back on lab results. Most likely lab results will report a dicamba level right at atmospheric levels given the drift happened weeks before samples were processed. Chemist will be totally unbiased as to where drift potential came from. First time offense is only a written warning. Given beans are the most susceptible crop to dicamba it’s hard for chemist to prove without a reasonable doubt where it came from because levels will be diluted out by time lab gets to it.
Edited by customizer 7/6/2020 01:13
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