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jim38curl 09-06-2008 09:45 PM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite unlikely as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato feed but after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff called - Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently washed it all over her runner beans which were below her hanging basket tomato's.

Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears so i said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this Provado is and if there's anything she can do other than destroy all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.

[email protected][_2_] 10-06-2008 03:37 AM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
On Jun 9, 1:45*pm, jim38curl
wrote:
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite unlikely
as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato feed but
after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff called -
Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently washed it
all over her runner beans which were below her hanging basket tomato's.

Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears so i
said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this Provado is
and if there's anything she can do other than destroy all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.

--
jim38curl


pretty nasty chemical, it is made to be absorbed directly by the
plants root systems, so it will end up in the plants leaves and fruit
(so oo kill any insect that eats the leafs). I'm afraid the soil will
have to be thrown out too (or better yet just use it for flowers from
now on).

steve

Aluckyguess 10-06-2008 05:51 AM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A0oGkj.2Bk...t/ld6AR005.pdf

I think I would call them.



Wilson 10-06-2008 03:44 PM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
sometime in the recent past jim38curl posted this:
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite unlikely
as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato feed but
after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff called -
Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently washed it
all over her runner beans which were below her hanging basket tomato's.


Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears so i
said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this Provado is
and if there's anything she can do other than destroy all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.




Hopefully you took the stuff (and whatever other poisons your mum is holding
onto) to the hazardous waste recylcling station so that it can be destroyed
properly.

This is rec.gardens.EDIBLE isn't it? Not rec.gardens.POISON-ME-A-LITTLE-BIT

--
Wilson N45 W67

phorbin 10-06-2008 04:56 PM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
In article 6236df6a-f5a7-461f-8001-ccb793d19c47
@m73g2000hsh.googlegroups.com, says...
On Jun 9, 1:45*pm, jim38curl
wrote:
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite unlikely
as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato feed but
after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff called -
Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently washed it
all over her runner beans which were below her hanging basket tomato's.

Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears so i
said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this Provado is
and if there's anything she can do other than destroy all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.

--
jim38curl


pretty nasty chemical, it is made to be absorbed directly by the
plants root systems, so it will end up in the plants leaves and fruit
(so oo kill any insect that eats the leafs). I'm afraid the soil will
have to be thrown out too (or better yet just use it for flowers from
now on).


We're completely organic here but

A quick dip into the net suggests that the stuff (imidacloprid) remains
active in the plant for six weeks.

I'm with someone else who suggested contacting Bayer.

Much as I deplore the use of any synthetic pesticide, rashly tossing
food plants would be an error if the solution is to wait six weeks and
then start harvesting for the table. --It means you've not lost the
whole growing and/or harvest season.

And if that -is- the solution, and there's ripe fruit in the interim I'd
pick it, compost it and keep waiting.

May I suggest that colour coding her fertilizers and poisons is a good
idea. An obvious thick line of red, green, yellow and black around the
neck of every bottle, depending on its use, could prevent this from
happening again.

J. Clarke 10-06-2008 06:25 PM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
phorbin wrote:
In article 6236df6a-f5a7-461f-8001-ccb793d19c47
@m73g2000hsh.googlegroups.com, says...
On Jun 9, 1:45 pm, jim38curl
wrote:
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite
unlikely as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato
feed
but after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff
called - Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently
washed it all over her runner beans which were below her hanging
basket tomato's.

Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears
so i said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this
Provado is and if there's anything she can do other than destroy
all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.

--
jim38curl


pretty nasty chemical, it is made to be absorbed directly by the
plants root systems, so it will end up in the plants leaves and
fruit
(so oo kill any insect that eats the leafs). I'm afraid the soil
will
have to be thrown out too (or better yet just use it for flowers
from
now on).


We're completely organic here but

A quick dip into the net suggests that the stuff (imidacloprid)
remains active in the plant for six weeks.

I'm with someone else who suggested contacting Bayer.

Much as I deplore the use of any synthetic pesticide, rashly tossing
food plants would be an error if the solution is to wait six weeks
and
then start harvesting for the table. --It means you've not lost the
whole growing and/or harvest season.

And if that -is- the solution, and there's ripe fruit in the interim
I'd pick it, compost it and keep waiting.

May I suggest that colour coding her fertilizers and poisons is a
good
idea. An obvious thick line of red, green, yellow and black around
the
neck of every bottle, depending on its use, could prevent this from
happening again.


Storing them in separate locations would help too.

--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)



mor 10-06-2008 10:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by J. Clarke (Post 797525)
phorbin wrote:
In article 6236df6a-f5a7-461f-8001-ccb793d19c47
@m73g2000hsh.googlegroups.com, says...
On Jun 9, 1:45 pm, jim38curl
wrote:
Hi all and sorry if this has been asked before ( although quite
unlikely as my mum's pretty unique ).

Basically my mum thought she'd fed her 15 tomato plants tomato
feed
but after feeding she realised she's actually fed them some stuff
called - Provado Vine Weevil killer 2.

In a panic she then tried to over water them and subsequently
washed it all over her runner beans which were below her hanging
basket tomato's.

Understandably she's gutted to the point of nearly being in tears
so i said i'd try and find out of anyone knows how dangerous this
Provado is and if there's anything she can do other than destroy
all her plants.

Thanks to anyone that can offer advice,

Jim.

--
jim38curl


pretty nasty chemical, it is made to be absorbed directly by the
plants root systems, so it will end up in the plants leaves and
fruit
(so oo kill any insect that eats the leafs). I'm afraid the soil
will
have to be thrown out too (or better yet just use it for flowers
from
now on).


We're completely organic here but

A quick dip into the net suggests that the stuff (imidacloprid)
remains active in the plant for six weeks.

I'm with someone else who suggested contacting Bayer.

Much as I deplore the use of any synthetic pesticide, rashly tossing
food plants would be an error if the solution is to wait six weeks
and
then start harvesting for the table. --It means you've not lost the
whole growing and/or harvest season.

And if that -is- the solution, and there's ripe fruit in the interim
I'd pick it, compost it and keep waiting.

May I suggest that colour coding her fertilizers and poisons is a
good
idea. An obvious thick line of red, green, yellow and black around
the
neck of every bottle, depending on its use, could prevent this from
happening again.


Storing them in separate locations would help too.

--
--
--John
to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

destorying them would be the best solution as some one may use them too.

phorbin 11-06-2008 04:45 AM

Provado on Tomatoes :(
 
In article ,
says...

May I suggest that colour coding her fertilizers and poisons is a
good
idea. An obvious thick line of red, green, yellow and black around
the
neck of every bottle, depending on its use, could prevent this from
happening again.


Storing them in separate locations would help too.


I'd be concerned about something getting stored in the wrong location.

IMO the better way is to engineer the packaging in some obvious way to
make errors harder.

anddrewjacckson 27-05-2011 08:24 PM

May I advance that colour coding her fertilizers and poisons is a good idea. An accessible blubbery band of red, green, chicken and atramentous about the neck of every bottle, depending on its use, could anticipate this from happening again.


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