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Oh dear, wrong chemical
Oh dear, oh dear.
During one of my more vague moments about a month ago I've mixed up a brew of Lebaycid and sprayed about 50 azaleas to control thrip. The thrip does seem to have gone, but a few (very large, very mature) of the azaleas are now looking a bit peaky. Having gone back (with glasses this time) to read the label on the bottle properly I spied a bottle of Confidor and had a lightning bolt like flash of recognition that this is the chemical I should have used. Both labels state to control thrip on ornamentals. Will the lebaycid harm the azaleas? Might there be some other cause of their droopiness? -- ..·´¨¨)) -:¦:- ¸.·´ .·´¨¨)) ((¸¸.·´ ..·´ Joanne -:¦:- - -:¦:- ((¸¸.·´ in lovely sunny Perth-:¦:- |
#2
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"The Lady Gardener" wrote in message ... Oh dear, oh dear. During one of my more vague moments about a month ago I've mixed up a brew of Lebaycid and sprayed about 50 azaleas to control thrip. The thrip does seem to have gone, but a few (very large, very mature) of the azaleas are now looking a bit peaky. Having gone back (with glasses this time) to read the label on the bottle properly I spied a bottle of Confidor and had a lightning bolt like flash of recognition that this is the chemical I should have used. Both labels state to control thrip on ornamentals. Will the lebaycid harm the azaleas? Might there be some other cause of their droopiness? Though I don't know the particular chemical (Lebaycid) my guess is that it would be ok to use on Azaleas considering it says ornamentals, and unless the label particularly says not to use on Azaleas and you mixed and used it at suggested rates it should be ok. We had azaleas at work that all started to look wilted. Even though we had a sprinkler system going it still didn't get down to the rootzone enough. We also had some lacebug infestation. I'd be looking at too much water, or not enough, check the soil, or other pests. Or any recent unseasonally hot weather (we hit 35degs cels on the coast here last week) Good luck -- .·´¨¨)) -:¦:- ¸.·´ .·´¨¨)) ((¸¸.·´ ..·´ Joanne -:¦:- - -:¦:- ((¸¸.·´ in lovely sunny Perth-:¦:- |
#3
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On Mon, 04 Oct 2004 07:34:30 GMT, "The Lady Gardener"
wrote: Oh dear, oh dear. During one of my more vague moments about a month ago I've mixed up a brew of Lebaycid and sprayed about 50 azaleas to control thrip. The thrip does seem to have gone, but a few (very large, very mature) of the azaleas are now looking a bit peaky. Having gone back (with glasses this time) to read the label on the bottle properly I spied a bottle of Confidor and had a lightning bolt like flash of recognition that this is the chemical I should have used. Both labels state to control thrip on ornamentals. Will the lebaycid harm the azaleas? Might there be some other cause of their droopiness? Lebaycid is fine for azaleas. I use it all the time. In fact, I think it is better than Confidor when it comes to the control of lace bug and red spider mite, both of which attack azaleas in the warmer months. |
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