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Oh, thank goodness!
We had two or three really hot, humid days (2 at 19° and 1 at 26° ) and we live in a village now so the possibility is there. When I saw those dead leaves I panicked.
Perhaps the poor things would like some water...
The problem with rounded personalities is they don't tesselate.
A few of the leaves were hanging down, looking exactly like the ones in the bottom pic - brown and curled, but they were crispy and I thought I remembered reading somewhere that blighted leaves ought to be soggy.
I'm hoping it's just severe windburn, very low night temps and a bit of whingeing about the root disturbance we inflicted on them when we planted them out last week.
The problem with rounded personalities is they don't tesselate.
I think I might have lost fewer plants if I had recognised it earlier, since it started very slowly and took ages to spread to the other beds.
In fact, the armpits up by the house are still fine...
The problem with rounded personalities is they don't tesselate.
I'm just making sure that I've very carefully removed any dead vegetation on and just below the surface of the beds. Bit of a pain and very slow work but fingers crossed it'll get rid of the majority of spores in the area.
Everything so far pulled up from the bed has been torched.
I'm also going to increase the planting distances and remove lower leaves earlier- and spray with Bordeaux mixture as from June ( if it's wet again)
I thought I'd left the worst of the blight probs back in the UK as the Cheshire summers were much damper than here.
Just goes to show doesn't it.
Back to my 'old methods' and see if they work.
I'll try again for a couple of years- and if all else fails I'll give up. Pity though
"Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple
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