Hi,,,,Can you help,,,2 years ago i had powdery Mildew on my Viola,s & Cucumbers,,,non what so ever last year ,,,but this year it seems to be coming back again,,,,is it somthing i am doing wrong which causes it,,?,,or is it an airborne fungus,,,what is the best way to get rid of it ,,,,can anyone help me please,,,,,? I look forward to your replies,,,,many thanks in advance,,,,!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Powdery Mildew ????
Collapse
X
-
-
I have found this
If you are seeing powdery-looking patches on the foliage of your plants, you most likely have a case of the very common powdery mildew fungal disease. Here is a simple spray for controlling the spread of the fungus. It won't get rid of the fungus on leaves that already have it, but it will prevent it from spreading to the rest of the plant.
Ingredients:
•1 gallon of water
•1 tablespoon of baking soda
•1 tablespoon of vegetable oil
•1 tablespoon of dishwashing liquid
Mix the ingredients together and add them to a spray bottle. Spray your plants weekly, preferably on overcast days to prevent it from burning the foliage.
Or you can use 1 part skimmed milk to 9 parts water.
Hope this helps
-
I find it's so much easier spraying everything that's susceptible to mildew and small horticultural pests (aphids, whitefly, spider mites etc.) with a weekly dose of SB Plant Invigorator. I've found this saves so much time and worry about checking for the appearance of these problems.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Vagetarian View PostFrom what I've read, it's recently been proven by agricultural universities in America that a milk solution is as effective as (or more effective than) commercial fungicides for treating mildew. Try 10:1 water:milk.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Florence Fennel View PostInteresting thank you HW. As a preparation for patient consumption, it's a whole lot more expensive than that, but the comparison stops there!
If you mean as an ingredient in a medical preparation, such as Gaviscon, then yes, the preparation will be more expensive. However, it's not a preparation that is required or desired, just the potassium bicarbonate.
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment