What do you do with soil that's had tomato blight?
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Problems with soil infected with tomato blight
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Nothing really, the spores only survive on living material and won't survive the winter.
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I've got rid of the infected plants !
I know it's a fungal disease and I'll have to thoroughly clean my greenhouse with a toothbrush and not grow tomatoes in there next year. Any other recommendations?
Could I re-use the soil on my outdoor beds?
Thanxs
Showers
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There is far too much hysteria about blight surviving in the soil, or even in a greenhouse over winter. As long as you use some basic hygiene and don't keep the temperatures high all winter with growing plants in the greenhouse, the chances of blight occurring next year are minimal; what will matter most is what is happening outside in the area! Like the new disease of ash trees, the spores of blight are borne in the wind and rain, and once it occurs in your area, when the conditions are wet and humid, it will almost certainly infect your plants which are outside (unless protected from the rain in some way). As Chris and others have said, to survive the winter it needs living materials: the worst for this are potato tubers left in the soil which start growing again the next year as 'volunteers' as these can often carry over blight from one year to the next. Once the potato seedling is infected it can pass blight on to nearby tomatoes. Similarly with compost heaps, a cool heap might well leave an entire blighted tomato unrotted all winter, from which blighted plants might start growing. Use a hot heap, or a closed bin, and there should be no problem
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