I’ve been reading up on the various persistent herbicides that are out there and how they can pass through animals and composting intact and I was wondering how significant an issue this would be for those of us gardening in Australia.

For my fellow gardeners, I’d like to know whether you’ve encountered this issue in your gardens and what steps you take to reduce the risk of contaminated materials entering your garden?

2 points

Like aminopyralids?

https://www.rhs.org.uk/soil-composts-mulches/weedkiller-in-manure

It might only be an issue if you are using hay or cow manure. Most people seem to use sugarcane.

I spoke to a friend that worked as a plumber at an abattoir and next door was a Searles. They used thebgrass from the cows stomach in some of their products. I had no idea potting mix wasn’t vegan. There is a potential contamination there.

Farmers and Grazon; name a more iconic duo.

permalink
report
reply
1 point

Yes, exactly those. It sounds like there are others (chrolopyralids, picloram and others), but aminopyralids are the longest lived in the soil, so the biggest concern.

A lot of the resources on it are discussing the issue from a US or UK perspective, and while a lot of the issues are similar it doesn’t help me assess how much of a risk a bag of manure from the local Bunnings or garden centre might really represent to my vege garden.

It’d also be worth hearing if there’s been any regulatory responses to this issue locally

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points

https://www.organicgardener.com.au/blogs/herbicide-alert

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://www.apvma.gov.au/sites/default/files/publication/13581-prs-aminopyralid.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwjfl-bQ26CFAxWrqFYBHcLSAvYQFnoECBsQAQ&usg=AOvVaw3b8JHoO5S7Kvc-CK0Ui9nJ

Some resources I found. I’d imagine that anything brought from Bunnings or other shops would be fine, the chance for contamination is always there but I guess, keep good records and proof and if anything goes wrong you can always chase them for the damages if you so inclined

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Thanks for that, that’s a much better resource than what I managed to find.

So it seems that there are is guidance aimed at keeping it out of composts and manures that people might use on their garden. It does sound like there’s still some risk that a supplier might cut corners or a farmer might lie in order to get a better price for contaminated feed/manures but having it in place does at least reduce the overall risk a fair bit.

permalink
report
parent
reply

Gardening Australia

!gardeningaustralia@aussie.zone

Create post

For all things related to the Aussie gardens. Plants, lawns, ugly fences, bare patches.

Please follow the instance rules and keep discussions civil and respectful.

Community stats

  • 21

    Monthly active users

  • 61

    Posts

  • 218

    Comments

Community moderators