Weed Management
Weeds in forage crops have an impact on your profit margins because they affect the quality of your forage, reduce yield, palatability, and your grazing area. Make use of Penn State Extension’s vast resources covering weed control and management of forage crops, common toxic and noxious weeds, and find tips on herbicide application.
Weed Control and Management in Forages
Weed control plays a key role in forage production. Without it, you run the risk of reduced forage yield, lower forage quality, increased incidences of disease and insect problems, premature stand loss, and problems when harvesting.
Understanding the characteristics of weeds, their life cycles, and keeping up to date with the latest weed control methods means you can choose the best methods for your own forage crop production.
There are many forage weed management strategies, but your focus should be on cultural practices, before chemical weed control. Forage stands that are vigorous and dense-growing, for example, have fewer weed problems. Other cultural and weed management practices that promote a highly competitive forage stand include seeding vigorous, well-adapted, and long-lived varieties, buying weed-free seed, cutting forage at the right time and growth stage, timely control of insect and disease problems, and rotating crops.
Timing plays an important role in a forage weed management system. Annual and perennial weeds are best controlled after silage harvest or in fallow areas. Fall is an excellent time for the control of biennial weeds. However, it’s still possible to effectively kill perennial and biennial weeds after a few hard frosts.
Herbicides provide a very convenient, economical, and effective way to control weeds. However, you should only use them when necessary, at recommended rates and times of application, and only for crops and uses listed in the label. Penn State Extension holds a Soybean Management Workshop and Herbicide Demonstration on-site, where producers are given the opportunity to discuss herbicide usage. Recommended herbicides do not generally injure people, wildlife, livestock, crops, or pasture.
Common Toxic and Noxious Weeds
If you want to control or eradicate weeds in your forage crops you have to be able to identify the different species. This is especially important for species that are toxic. Grazing animals will rarely eat poisonous weeds, but you should still aim to minimize the risk with careful control.
- Jimsonweed: This is an annual plant that is poisonous to animals and humans. One distinguishing characteristic is its spiky egg-shaped pod.
- Multiflora rose: It was originally introduced from Asia and promoted as a “living fence” but it is now a noxious weed in Pennsylvania and surrounding states. You can control it, but it takes considerable effort.
- Noxious pigweeds: Palmer amaranth and waterhemp are two species of pigweed recently introduced into Pennsylvania. It requires an integrated management approach and aggressive weed management strategies to prevent seed production and the spread of these weeds.
- Milkweed: Milkweed is a native perennial that exudes a white, milky juice from broken or cut surfaces. It can be very problematic when left to develop into a thriving stand which has spread into a hay field.
- Poison hemlock: Penn State Extension’s Poison Hemlock Identification video shows you how to identify this toxic weed.
Learn about management and herbicide use for perennial weeds and earn pesticide applicator recertification credits with Penn State Extension’s Problem Weeds in Field Crops: Managing Perennials online courses.
Forage Crops Herbicides Application
You must take a number of factors into account when applying herbicides. Making sure they stay on target, for example, is essential. Particular care is necessary when applying burndown herbicides close to vineyards and other sensitive areas. Herbicide drift and drift-related damage could prove very costly. Luckily, there are ways you can reduce spray drift. You can reduce spray pressures and only spray at low wind velocities, for example.
Timing is another crucial factor. There are herbicides that are more effective when applied in the spring. Anthem Flex, Axial XL, Dimetric EXT, and Huskie are better applied in the fall. You can use certain herbicides over the top of emerging crops such as soybeans. Some winter annual weeds are easier to manage in the fall. Application restrictions apply if a crop is being harvested for silage, forage, grazing, or grain.
The weather can be a determining factor. Soil-applied herbicides cannot be properly activated for weed control if there has been a lack of rainfall. The weather can also affect the spraying of burndown herbicides. Air temperatures, in particular, can influence control with burndown herbicides.
Herbicides are very effective at controlling weeds, but there’s the issue of persistence to consider, as it can affect subsequent crop growth.
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NewsHerbicide Recommendations for Winter Small Grains
Date Posted 10/7/2025Small grain establishment and growth can be hindered by weeds, but here are some herbicide options to consider for problem weed species. -
NewsHerbicides for Fencerows and Farmsteads
Date Posted 9/16/2025Certain herbicides can be used under fencerows and around farm structures. -
NewsFall Weed Control in Pastures, Hay, and Other Forages
Date Posted 8/26/2025Fall is an excellent time to manage biennial and perennial weeds and Japanese stiltgrass in pastures and hay and to control problem weeds after silage harvest. -
NewsHorsenettle Control in Grass Pastures and Hayfields
Date Posted 8/19/2025Horsenettle was a serious problem in many grass forages this season. Some management considerations are below. -
NewsWeed Seeds This Fall Mean More Weeds Next Spring
Date Posted 8/19/2025Control annual weeds now in fallow areas to prevent seed set. Also, now is the time to start considering ways to manage perennials in small grain stubble. -
NewsIs Now a Good Time to Control Perennial Weeds in Grass Forages?
Date Posted 7/15/2025Milkweed, hemp dogbane, Canada thistle and others are very aggressive perennials that can be difficult to control in grass hay or pasture systems. Some management considerations are below. -
NewsPastures and Hayfields: Poisonous Weeds, Multiflora Rose, and Other Suggestions
Date Posted 5/27/2025Below is a summary of common poisonous weeds in pastures; learn about how certain weeds can be toxic to livestock as well as suggestions to control multiflora rose and other weeds. -
NewsControl Buttercup and Poison Hemlock in Pastures Now
Date Posted 4/16/2025Buttercup and poison hemlock tend to dominate many pastures throughout the state, and now is the time to manage them for best control. -
NewsEarly Spring Weeds in No-Till Fields
Date Posted 4/1/2025As the weather warms, weeds grow quickly. Below is an overview of commonly found weeds during the early spring season, especially in no-till settings. -
NewsFlexible Burndown Herbicide Programs for Corn or Soybean
Date Posted 4/1/2025Certain herbicides provide flexibility if you need to switch between corn or soybean crops. -
NewsSpring Weedy Grass Control in Grass Hay and Pasture
Date Posted 3/18/2025Considerations for weedy grass and broadleaf control options in grass forages during early spring. -
NewsPenn State Agronomy Highlights Podcast in Third Season
Date Posted 3/3/2025Join hosts Ryan Spelman and Justin Brackenrich in the third season of the Agronomy Highlights Podcast. -
ArticlesRiparian Buffers for Field Crops, Hay, and Pastures
Riparian buffers serve to protect our waterways and, in our field crops and pastures, can help to prevent erosion while intercepting sediment that carries nutrients and pollutants. -
Guides and PublicationsStarting at $15.00
The Penn State Agronomy Guide
An updated, 2025 edition of this guide that provides information on crop and soil management, as well as recommendations for managing weed, insect, and disease pests in various crops. -
NewsIntroducing NovaGraz for Weed Control in Grass Forages
Date Posted 11/11/2024NovaGraz is a new herbicide for use in grass pastures and hayfields including those with white clover. -
ArticlesFall Forage Management Tips
Fall forage management is important for overwintering cool-season perennials in both hay and pasture systems and to promote healthy spring growth. -
NewsSpring Oat Herbicide Options
Date Posted 4/30/2024Weeds can be a problem in spring oat fields. This article provides some herbicide options to consider. -
ArticlesIs it Poison Hemlock or Wild Chervil?
Poison hemlock and wild chervil look very similar and resume growth early in the spring. Learn more about these look-alike weeds. -
Guides and PublicationsStarting at $8.00
Mid-Atlantic Field Crop Weed Management Guide
Get strategies and peruse herbicide tables for managing weeds in corn, sorghum, soybeans, small grains, and forages. -
ArticlesEvaluation and Considerations on Newly Established Forages
Newly established forage stands need every opportunity to express themselves and grow, but we also must know when to cut our losses on a failed seeding, and plan for the next crop. -
ArticlesMultiflora Rose Control in Pastures
The spread of multiflora rose in Pennsylvania caused it to be designated as a noxious weed. Multiflora rose can be controlled but it takes considerable effort. -
ArticlesGlyphosate (Roundup): Understanding Risks to Human Health
A review of the risk assessment process for evaluating the potential of glyphosate to cause adverse effects on human health. -
NewsBurndown Herbicides, Drift, and Vineyards
Date Posted 4/19/2022If you plan to spray burndown herbicides close to vineyards or other sensitive areas, please read the below article for additional details and consider using DriftWatch. -
ArticlesWeed Management in Pasture Systems
Weeds can replace desirable grass species, filling in gaps or voids and reducing yield and overall quality of pasture and forages.
