They were all greenhoused and I've now brought them outside into the garden as the greenhouse was getting very humid. Here's some photos (taken with my phone so excuse the quality)...




Thanks for looking :)






http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)


Plain water drops and sunlight won't burn your leaves:Odsox wrote:The last leaf looks like it was burnt by a droplet of water in the sun, also the tom fruits look like they've been water spotted.
You don't water (spray) them during daylight hours do you ? Although it looks like they are outside, so was probably raindrops.

That's interesting, but I feel an experiment coming on.theoldpunk wrote:Plain water drops and sunlight won't burn your leaves:Odsox wrote:The last leaf looks like it was burnt by a droplet of water in the sun, also the tom fruits look like they've been water spotted.
You don't water (spray) them during daylight hours do you ? Although it looks like they are outside, so was probably raindrops.
http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~linda%20ch ... scorch.pdf
The myth possibly came about from the practice of watering earlier in the day (to avoid rapid evaporation and reduce the chance of fungal diseases). There are lots of possible causes of leaf damage but this isn't one of them




http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)


http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)



I haven't heard of or seen pictures of that before - first of all that's a really good link and I'm going to save it - 2nd of all having just been talking curcurbit diseases on another thread it does seem that practically everything catches either blight, rust, mould, mildew, wilt or anthracnosegrahamhobbs wrote:Millymollymandy, good to hear your experience that with Bordeaux mixture blight can be controlled even after it is first noted, I never realised this. i guess you need to get in very quick with the treatment. Similarly with saving the fruit, previously mine and other fellow allotmenters have found that perfectectly good looking fruit have just gone rotten after a week or so.
This year my wife came back and said we had blight on the tomatoes in the polytunnel (she is a gardener by trade, although I do most of the veg. growing at the allotment). The following evening I rushed up there after work, picked all the tomatoes big, small green and red, and having just be given a super-dooper sprayer, sprayed everything with Bordeaux mixture and stripped all the affected leaves. Went home feeling a mixture of dismay that we had got blight in our polytunnel but elation that I had dealt with it quickly and that we might at least get some tomatoes and some chutney out of it.
Then I started to think about those chocolate brown blotches on the leaves and the fact that in my experience blight moves fast, leaves, then stem and then fruit. This was only on the leaves and all plants, except the Pink Brandywines. I looked up tomato problems on the internet and there it was LEAF MOLD not blight. So now I am elated that we don't have blight but dismayed I'd picked all the tomatoes before they were ready.
The link below gives very good pictures of tomato diseases in case anyone is uncertain what things look like
http://www.avrdc.org/photos/tomato_diseases/index.html
 
   
   just that they seem to have different latin names for different species. It's a ruddy nightmare!
  just that they seem to have different latin names for different species. It's a ruddy nightmare!
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM,(thanks)