meadowflower: (Default)
[personal profile] meadowflower posting in [community profile] gardening
Hello!

This is the second year we've had our home. There was a vegetable garden area already laid out when we came. Last year was an extremely wet summer and a very bad growing season here. Early season stuff was great - yellow and green squash, some cukes, etc. However as summer rains came consistently, I got powdery mildew on EVERYTHING (as well as blight on the tomatoes).

This year, our tomatoes are great (no blight). However, we had powdery mildew almost from the get-go, even though we did not water at night, didn't keep the ground wet, etc. Our only crops that came out well were green beans and tomatoes. All of the pumpkin, squash, cucumbers got powdery mildrew.

This stuff may have been in the soil/plants before we moved in, or maybe we didn't get it all out last year. I don't know. Is there some way we can treat (natural, non-chemical) the soil to minimize its return next year? We don't have much growing space but I am thinking of letting that plot sit for a year or two and just do my growing in a different area of the yard. 

Thanks for any tips!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-09-21 08:28 am (UTC)
fwuffydragon: (allotment)
From: [personal profile] fwuffydragon
Next year you could try different varieties - I know that some are more resistant to powdery mildew than others.

Ways to control it - water the roots not the leaves of the plants, and remove all affected leaves as soon as you see them. Keep the plants fed so they are strong enough to replace lost leaves and fight the virus.

Oh, and if you can grow these somewhere different next year it may give the virus time to clear from the soil.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-09-21 10:19 am (UTC)
feroxargentea: (Default)
From: [personal profile] feroxargentea
They say powdery mildew is worse in hot summers when plants go short of water. Unlike grey mould and tomato blight, powdery mildew is supposed to like drought not damp. I think the spores are so widespread that you can't really eliminate them by treatment or leaving plots fallow - it's more a case of not providing the conditions in which the fungus will thrive.

My cucumbers etc always seem to get a fair bit of powdery mildew whatever I do with them, though. Oh well, they crop anyway.

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