Recent Articles

Tank Mixing & Spray Timing: Getting It Right for Broadacre Systems
May 8, 2026
Getting tank mixes right is one of the simplest ways to protect product performance, avoid compatibility issues, and ensure every pass across the paddock delivers value. Whether you’re applying herbicides, foliar nutrition, plant growth regulators, or biologicals, the fundamentals remain the same: clean water, correct order, stable pH, and good agitation. For Australian growers working across variable water quality, tight spray windows, and increasingly complex tank mixes, following a disciplined mixing sequence is essential.

2025 National Trial Results
February 27, 2026
Season 2025 has further strengthened the case for integrating targeted nutrient efficiency and stress mitigation strategies into Australian broadacre systems. At Active AgriScience, research and development sits at the centre of product design. Our specialty multi-nutrient boosters combine balanced nutrition with INTRINSIC™, our patented stress-management molecule, developed to help crops better manage abiotic stress events throughout the growing season.

Seed Nutrition: Technical Considerations for Establishing a Healthy Crop
February 5, 2026
Crop establishment is a critical determinant of yield potential in broadacre farming systems. The physiological processes that occur during germination and early seedling development directly influence root architecture, nutrient uptake efficiency, stress tolerance, and ultimately grain yield. Seed nutrition plays a key role in supporting these early-stage processes by ensuring essential nutrients are available at the point of demand.

Should Nitrogen Still Be an Input We Expect to Lose?
January 30, 2026
Today’s farms are built around precision and performance. And yet, nitrogen is still often managed with the expectation that a portion of it simply won’t make it to the crop. Not because of poor management. But because nitrogen loss has long been accepted as unavoidable. With today’s understanding of nitrogen behaviour, is accepting loss still the most efficient approach, or is it time to manage nitrogen the same way we manage every other high-value input?
