Originally posted by orangepippin
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A tree well-suited to spray-free (or even to a breeding programme for disease resistance) must have no weak points at all, because, sooner or later, the variable British Weather will punish it.
I my area, where the weather is typically mild, low-rainfall but humid and with fairly infertile and low-moisture-retaining soil, powdery mildew is a severe problem.
I had to abandon Suntan, Empire and a few others because mildew destroyed them. For me, mildew is as bad as canker is for growers in wet regions because it incorporates itself into the wood to re-emerge next season - and it can overwhelm a susceptible tree in one or two seasons, and kill it within 2-3 seasons.
Many book writers dismiss mildew (and woolly aphids) but of all the pests and diseases, they are the most likely to keep me awake at night worrying how to deal with them.
The "MM" series rootstocks such as MM106 and MM111 were derived from the original Malling "M" series, but developed specifically for resistance to woolly aphid.
However, the over-use of MM and Spy is leading to an increase in "Spy-capable" woolly aphids which have overcome the Spy and MM resistance.
Also a susceptible scion on an MM rootstock will still be somewhat susceptible to woolly aphids as it is the rootstock piece which has the resistance; not the scion. This helps prevent woolly aphids from "hiding" underground, but the above-ground parts of the tree can (and probably will) still be attacked.
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