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Old 07-08-2011, 03:41 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Jeff Layman[_2_] Jeff Layman[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2008
Posts: 2,166
Default Impatiens - Au Revoir or Goodbye?

On 07/08/2011 13:31, Jake wrote:
On Sun, 7 Aug 2011 10:40:29 +0000 (UTC),
wrote:

Jake:
Having spent much of yesterday digging up all my impatiens, which have
succumbed to that fungus this year, and then buying up any remaining
decent bedding in the local garden centre to fill the more visible gaps,
it was heartening to read in Amateur Gardening today a prediction that
impatiens "could die out" within five years. Seems that T&M are
researching alternatives "in case".

I've got something in my head that I've read somewhere that other plants
are also possibly susceptible to this "downy mildew" fungus and
shouldn't be planted where impatiens have been affected. But I can't
remember where I read this and what plants were mentioned. Does this
ring a bell with anyone else?


Hi Jake

Could you describe what the fungus looks like?

I've got some impatiens, most of the flowers have gone (usually they last
till 1st frost), the few that are left the pink looks washed out with
white patches. The stems and leaves maybe look a bit yellow/brown but
mostly very light green.

Is this what you're seeing? Do I need to dig up everything& burn? To me
it looks more tattey than disaesed at the min - my natural reaction is to
leave them and see if more flowers come later.

Thanks!

Kate xxx


Hi Kate

Have a look at

http://apps.rhs.org.uk/advicesearch/...e.aspx?pid=205


That RHS page states "There are no fungicides available to amateur
gardeners for the control of this disease".

That's not entirely accurate. Amateurs cannot treat the disease once
the plants have it, but spraying with mancozeb (Dithane) can act as a
preventative to infection. See "3 Chemical control options" on the
final page at
http://www.stockbridgeonline.co.uk/w...ldew-guide.pdf

Whether or not you think it worth it to spray with Dithane is another
matter!

--

Jeff