From Tom Dudek, Michigan State University Extenstion
Nursery growers need to utilize pesticides as a part of their Integrated Pest Management (IPM) programs when producing ornamental nursery crops. However, on rare occasions, weather conditions, field locations, operator error or equipment problems can lead to off-target pesticide spray drift.
In most cases, crop damage to an adjoining neighbor’s field is dealt with when both parties reach an agreement for compensation. The initial spray drift situation should never occur if the spray applicator has filed a “drift management plan” prior to each application and is taking the necessary steps to eliminate spray drift.
View a drift management plan template here.
Applicators should complete all applicable sections of the document and keep the plan on file in case a complaint occurs.
Some techniques you can use to reduce pesticide drift from your applications include:
Choose low or non-volatile pesticides as they are formulated to reduce drift.
Always read the pesticide label. In many “spray drift cases,” the statements on the label were not followed, thus a label violation occurred.
Consider larger spray orifice sizes, resulting in larger droplets that reduce drift.
Eliminate high pressures. Anything over 45 psi for broadcast applications causes fine droplets, which drift more.
Winds should be less than 10 mph when spraying. Winds over that speed will cause drift to non-target sites such as sensitive crops, livestock, home gardens, residences or irrigation water sources.
See photos and get more information here.