deserteagle71
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2017
- Messages
- 2,253
- Location
- northern Nevada
- Tractor
- John Deere 2020 diesel, Kubota M7060HDC12
This past February our local cropduster was testing some new equipment:
Not that it helps your friend particularly, but the adjacent farmer is liable for overspray in many areas. I'm not sure the few dollars would be worth the neighborly ill will to me, but I certainly wouldn't be putting in backyard veggies for sure.I have a friend that has given up gardening in his back yard due to the crop dusters... everything wilts and dies within days after the plane goes by.
As I recall, it was the per chlorate version, the same that is used in solid rocket fuel. There was a huge factory in Henderson Nevada that burned to the ground when they suffered a natural gas line rupture. Had a worker tell me he got it on his gloves in the wet state; it later dried, and when he went to take them off, they burst into flame.Not that it helps your friend particularly, but the adjacent farmer is liable for overspray in many areas. I'm not sure the few dollars would be worth the neighborly ill will to me, but I certainly wouldn't be putting in backyard veggies for sure.
@2LaneCruzer That's quite the story. The sodium chlorate would probably have been used as a desiccant, to defoliate and dry the plants out for harvest. They still use it today (defoliate-750).
All the best,
Peter
Those guys helped save my place from a wildfire a few years ago.This time of year - the Forrest Service and several local crop dusters are flying for fire suppression. Some are turbo Air Tractors - 802 AT.