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 Use with broadcast, starter, in-furrow, 2x2, Y-DROP, banding, foliar, fertigation and most other application methods

Using SNX30+ is a great addition to your "toolbox", but without the sky-high equipment cost, learning curve and maintenance expense in time, labor and money lost with other technology. NOTE: Ensure you have a minimum of 2% soil organic matter.

 

With an added per acre cost as low as $1.40 and greater yield and profitability, SNX30+ is a win-win. Use SNX30+ at any time during the season.

QUICK MIX – Pour the contents of the whole bottle (1/8 oz.) into a 1200 gal tank mix, or 3/4 bottle for 800-1000 gal tank mix, 1/2 bottle for 600-700 gal tank mix, or 1/3 bottle for 400-500 gal tank mix.

 

Each time you make a pass across the field with your tank mix use these amounts for SNX30+ and apply whatever field rate you require for your fertilizer (10 gal, 15 gal, 20 gal, etc).

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If you are using tanks smaller than 400 gal, divide the total number of gallons the tank holds by 15 and this will tell you the number of drops of SNX30+ to add to the tank (one drop for each 15 gal).

 

For example, let's say you normally use a 300 gal tank filled with NPK, micros, etc. Divide 300 by 15 and you get 20 drops. Always round up. If you have a 50 gal tank use 4 drops, a 70 gal tank use 5 drops, etc.

 

With tanks under 400 gal, each pass across the field with your tank mix of NPKs, micros, fish fertilizer, slurry manure, liquid poultry litter or compost tea, add SNX30+ to your tank mix at one drop per each 15 gallons of mix in your tank.

 

Whether you're using small or large tanks, if you've already added solid biostimulants (manure, poultry litter, etc.) or hard fertilizer to your field, use water only in your tank with SNX30+ at the recommended tank rate and a field rate of 10 gallons of water per acre.

The Hidden Culprit That Can Rob Yield and Profit

Soil pH may not seem that crucial until you consider how it can rob your yield and profit through poor nutrient uptake.

 

There's a lot of talk about fertilizer application, strip-till, no-till, cover crops and more. But, the foundation to all of these best practices is correct soil pH.

 

Check out the graph below and see how you've been robbing yourself without knowing it. Target 6.5 pH for corn and 5.8 to 6.2 for a corn/soybean rotation (up to 6.8 depending on crop). Keep in mind at various recommended pH levels some nutrients will fall out and may need to be added.

pH.PNG
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