Enlist® Field Forward: Tony Bangert

Olivia Rahe, Communications Lead

In 2016, Burrus grower Tony Bangert and his son Matt of Scott County, IL was offered the opportunity to participate in the Enlist Field Forward program. The Field Forward program is a closely monitored field trial of the Enlist® system in soybeans, administered by Dow AgroSciences. 

With our Enlist E3™ product lineup, we are sharing the experience and feedback of growers with firsthand knowledge of the Enlist system.

Todd Burrus and Tony Bangert discuss the experience with the Enlist system during a field visit.

Q: You’ve been able to watch your Enlist field this year, tell me about your thoughts based on the experience with the weed control and genetics of Enlist?

A: The Enlist beans were planted June 4, which is a little late for us and when we were out scouting the field early it was pretty clean. We were going to spray 3 days later and the amount of weed pressure that exploded in 3 days was just awesome. We went from couldn’t hardly find weeds, to seeing 4 inch tall waterhemp; we were literally amazed and this just went out there and cleaned it up.  I was just in the field and it’s amazing, it controlled every weed that it touched. I had not seen a weed that it did not control.

Q: And why are clean beans so important?

A: Anybody that’s ever run a combine can answer that for you. Yield of course, the weeds will hurt your yields but the combining is just so much easier.

Q: How about the growth and the appearance of these beans?  You said they were planted June 4 and we’re here on the 22 of July that’s 6 weeks.

A: These beans were planted in 30” rows and the rows are growing together in 6 weeks that to me is amazing. They look beautiful; I don’t know what else to say, they absolutely look beautiful at this time.  When we sprayed the Enlist, I saw no harmful effects to the soybeans at all and I watched it pretty closely. I didn’t see any movement at all, none.

Q: And why is that important?

A: We have seed corn growing right beside it so obviously we can’t have damage. There was no carryover or movement into the seed corn at all. Commercial corn on the other side no movement in that.  There’s just no movement at all.

Q: How do you feel about that since there’s 2,4-D in the product?

A:  I was scared.  I grew up with 2,4-D.  We, I mean it’s an old chemistry that’s been around forever and we think 2,4-D kills soybeans and obviously in this case it didn’t.  It killed the weeds and the beans were fine.  I mean—like I said, no damage at all to the beans.

Burrus grower Tony Bangert inspects Enlist E3 soybean plants during his participation in the 2016 Enlist Field Forward program.

Q: How do you feel that Enlist compares to Roundup in the area of weed control and the ease of use?

A: We have used Roundup for a long time. The spraying is not different. I was trying to think of any difference honestly outside of the fact that the weeds are dead in this case. Glyphosate was a wonderful chemical but we have some weeds out there that are not dying from it anymore and we need a new chemistry to make this stuff work and the Enlist bean I was just very impressed with how it took down some good size waterhemp. It took down some marestail that was pretty good size, stuff that the glyphosate just isn’t getting any more.

Q: The Enlist system has 3 modes of action, why is that kind of chemistry important for your operation in the future?

A: That goes back to not getting resistant weeds out there.  We need to attack these weeds through several modes of action because if we don’t, we’re going to wind up with resistant weeds again I’m afraid.

Q: What kind of advice would you give other growers who are considering using the Enlist system?

A:  I would say don’t be afraid of it at all. For people my age, you know 60 years and older that grew up with 2,4-D there’s probably a little bit of a fear factor I would not be afraid of it at all. I mean I’m sure we’ll be using a lot of this in the future.