Possible Potato Blight??

Anything to do with growing herbs and vegetables goes here.
Post Reply
Trying2BGreenMummy
margo - newbie
margo - newbie
Posts: 4
Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2007 8:14 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Possible Potato Blight??

Post: # 60051Post Trying2BGreenMummy »

Hi guys,
I'm not sure and hoping someone might be able to help. My earlies have lots of brown spots on the leaves. Its not patches as shown in most pictures of infected crops so I'm not convinced. Is it just that the spots will form bigger patches or is it a different problem altogether?
I've grown them in a compost bin so if one is infected they all will be and I'll lose the whole crop :( I thought they would have started to flower by now but nothing yet so wondering if that is a sign somethng is wrong too.

Also my tomatoes this year have golden tinged leaves. I've grown gardeners delight the same as last year but never had this before. I'm really suffering as I've lost all my beans, peppers, lettuces, cauli, cabbage, carrots, squash and peas to the slugs and snails. If I lose my spuds and tomatoes as well it'll be a pretty pathetic year!! We'll be living off onions and sweetcorn :roll:

Any advice gratefully received.

User avatar
red
A selfsufficientish Regular
A selfsufficientish Regular
Posts: 6513
Joined: Sun Jul 30, 2006 7:59 pm
Location: Devon UK
Contact:

Post: # 60063Post red »

how disheartening.. try to remember we all have bad years.. and this year has been difficult with April and May being switched!

did you have any frost? could it be frost damage to your spuds?
Red

I like like minded people... a bit like minded anyway.. well people with bits of their minds that are like the bits of my mind that I like...

my website: colour it green

etsy shop

blog

User avatar
Millymollymandy
A selfsufficientish Regular
A selfsufficientish Regular
Posts: 17637
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 6:09 am
Location: Brittany, France

Post: # 60112Post Millymollymandy »

It's not looking great in my veggie patch either - I'm doing slightly better than you because I've got onions, sweetcorn (though only got 6) and some spinach beet!

On the bright side I didn't have to spend any time watering last month!

Trying2BGreenMummy
margo - newbie
margo - newbie
Posts: 4
Joined: Fri Apr 27, 2007 8:14 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Post: # 60153Post Trying2BGreenMummy »

Hi Red, We had frost just after I planted them but I knew it was coming and they were well covered to protect them - both the spuds and tommies. Have had none since, being in the south east has its advantages!!
Has been a pig of a year so far though, just have to take heart that I haven't had to use any tap water on the crops yet!!
MMM, well I only have 7 corn so not much better!!! Not wanting to sound malicious but I'm glad it's not just me!!
I'll just have to leave them as is and wait and see what happens. Hopefully the predicted better weather this week will let the spuds flower and I might get a few tatties out of it.
Fingers crossed!

User avatar
ohareward
Living the good life
Living the good life
Posts: 435
Joined: Thu Jan 18, 2007 1:48 am
Location: Ohoka, Nth Canty, New Zealand

Post: # 60345Post ohareward »

I found this on the web.

How to Get Rid of
Snails and Slugs

by Barbara Josef

With Spring and warm weather here, we turn our time to gardening and making our gardens the best ever. But wait, we have invaders that want to stop our progress and today I want to write about one of the worst; the slimiest, creepiest, crawliest: the SLUGS and SNAILS that invade our gardens when most of our seedlings and new growth are the most vulnerable.

Let's learn a bit about these critters and then I will give you some suggestions as to how to get rid of them.

Slugs are hermaphrodites: they all have male and female reproductive systems. They can mate with themselves!! Yuck! They can stretch to 20 times their normal length to squeeze through openings to get at food. Slug eggs are in the soil just about everywhere. It takes moisture to allow them to hatch. They can be in the ground for years and hatch when conditions are right. The eggs are oval shaped white colored eggs in moist soil areas, under rocks and boards. Eggs are laid in clusters of two dozen eggs each. Adults can bury themselves over winter in the soil and can live for years. There are at least 40 varieties of slugs.

Now, some of the ways to get rid of these creatures are as follows:

Keep all decaying matter cleaned out of your garden beds. Clear all dead leaves from the garden.
Cultivation of the soil will help kill hibernating slugs and eggs.
Remove slugs and snails by hand. If you are too finicky, use chopsticks. If you get the slime on your fingers or hands pour a little cheap white vinegar on your hands and wash
it off with lukewarm water.
Squish or drown the slugs in ajar of soapy water.
Install barriers of 2-inch or wider copper stripping around plants and flower beds. Do
this only after you have removed all slugs around the plants.
Set yeast traps in troublesome beds. Sink a shallow jar so the top is flush with the ground. Fill the trap with beer, regular or nonalcoholic to 1/2 inch from the top and wait for the slugs to fall in and drown. A recent survey on what kind of beer slugs like best tells us they prefer Budweiser, Bud light, Coors light, Michelob, Old Milwaukee. Pretty good taste buds huh?
For those who don't want to waste beer, try adding 1/2 tsp. baking yeast and 1 tbsp. sugar to the water in each trap.
Minimize the moist and cool spots in your garden. Water lawns and gardens in the morning. These guys are nocturnal and can slither better on wet grass and soil.
Some people use salt, but this is cruel; sure it's fun watching them bubble into nothing, but crushing them is quicker and more humane.
Use the lint from your dryer as a barrier around your seedlings and plants.
Cedar, oak bark chips or gravel chips will irritate and dehydrates them.
Try a barrier line of powdered ginger.
Use wood ashes as a barrier, but try not to let the plant come into contact with the ashes.
Shingles or sandpaper after you get rid of the slugs in the area. Lay a barrier of these around the area to keep slugs out.
Spread well crushed eggshells around the plants.
Sprinkle a line of lime around the plants.
Talcum powder or diatomaceous earth work as barriers too. The diatomaceous earth will kill earthworms though and you do not want to breath it.
Copper strips or pennies around the plant works too. The metal ions in copper repel slugs.
A mulch made of stems and leaves of strong smelling herbs like wormwood, mints,
tansy, lemon balm helps keep them out.
Hair and fur can be used as a barrier to entangle slugs.
Oak leaves, lettuce and cabbages can deter slugs, so does seaweed if you have access to some. Cook the cabbage leaves until soft, drizzle some butter or lard over them. Place them in slug prone areas. Within several hours the leaves will be swarming with slugs and you can destroy them.
Coffee grounds, Epsom salts, builders' sand, nut shells and cocoa hulls may also be tried.
Grape juice can be used in the same way as beer traps. Slugs really love grape juice.
Some plants slugs generally steer clear of: Artemisias, daylilies, Fresia, Lemon balm,
Red cabbage, alyssum, Azaleas, Daffodils, Grapes, Mint, Lungwort, Rosemary, Red oak
leaf lettuce, Basil, Evergreens, Corn, Fennel, Cosmos, Chard, Foxglove, Hibiscus, Ivy Swedish in particular, parsley, sages, tansy, pumpkin, sunflowers, chicory and endive.
Some predators of slugs include: ground beetles, particularly carabid beetles, turtles, toads, frogs, lizards, rove beetles, salamanders, lightening bug larvae, garter snakes, and especially most birds. The appeal factor to all these creatures is the fact that slugs are pure protein. Yummy.

Robin
'You know you are a hard-core gardener if you deadhead flowers in other people's gardens.

To err is human. To blame someone else, is management potential.

Post Reply