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[email protected] 11-05-2010 12:27 PM

Tomato Wilt
 
For three years now I have lost my tomatoes to wilt. Can anyone tell
me why?

MJ

Bill who putters 11-05-2010 12:42 PM

Tomato Wilt
 
In article
,
" wrote:

For three years now I have lost my tomatoes to wilt. Can anyone tell
me why?

MJ


http://vegetablemdonline.ppath.corne...omato_List.htm

--
Bill S. Jersey USA zone 5 shade garden
What use one more wake up call?

http://www.thesunmagazine.org/ many stars

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 11-05-2010 11:36 PM

Tomato Wilt
 
wrote:
For three years now I have lost my tomatoes to wilt. Can anyone tell
me why?

MJ


You don't give us much to go on.

Humid or rainy conditions
Poor watering practice, water splashed up the leaves carrying spores and
making damp
Not enough air circulation and sun
Planting in the same bed, ie not rotating
Using susceptible cultivars
...

The first you cannot do much about, if you have 2 months of overcast and
warm summer drizzle you can forget your tomatoes. The rest you may be able
to improve.

David






[email protected] 12-05-2010 12:27 AM

Tomato Wilt
 
On May 11, 6:36*pm, "David Hare-Scott" wrote:
wrote:
For three years now I have lost my tomatoes to wilt. Can anyone tell
me why?


MJ


You don't give us much to go on.

Humid or rainy conditions
Poor watering practice, water splashed up the leaves carrying spores and
making damp
Not enough air circulation and sun
Planting in the same bed, ie not rotating
Using susceptible cultivars
*...

The first you cannot do much about, if you have 2 months of overcast and
warm summer drizzle you can forget your tomatoes. *The rest you may be able
to improve.

David


None of the above apply. I looked at the web site sent to me a few
more but I still can't figure it out. They talked about bacteria in
the soil but wouldn't that destroy everything else? Very Frustrating.
What if I cut off the leaves/stem that have wilted. I guess it
couldn't hurt

phorbin 12-05-2010 03:53 AM

Tomato Wilt
 
In article 4706b34d-fbaa-4ad5-ad58-44068d343202
@b18g2000yqb.googlegroups.com, says...


None of the above apply. I looked at the web site sent to me a few
more but I still can't figure it out. They talked about bacteria in
the soil but wouldn't that destroy everything else? Very Frustrating.


The short answer to your question is, "not necessarily." The bacteria
will destroy anything that is susceptible and has no resistance. If the
plants around the tomatoes are more resistant then they won't be as
affected if they are affected at all.

Find the book "What's wrong with my plant (and how do I fix it?) : a
visual guide to easy diagnosis and organic remedies" by David Deardorff
and Kathryn Wadsworth

IIRC it uses a flow-chart model of diagnosing plant problems and the
process is very straight-forward.





David Hare-Scott[_2_] 12-05-2010 05:00 AM

Tomato Wilt
 
wrote:
On May 11, 6:36 pm, "David Hare-Scott" wrote:
wrote:
For three years now I have lost my tomatoes to wilt. Can anyone tell
me why?


MJ


You don't give us much to go on.

Humid or rainy conditions
Poor watering practice, water splashed up the leaves carrying spores
and making damp
Not enough air circulation and sun
Planting in the same bed, ie not rotating
Using susceptible cultivars
...

The first you cannot do much about, if you have 2 months of overcast
and warm summer drizzle you can forget your tomatoes. The rest you
may be able to improve.

David


None of the above apply. I looked at the web site sent to me a few
more but I still can't figure it out. They talked about bacteria in
the soil but wouldn't that destroy everything else? Very Frustrating.
What if I cut off the leaves/stem that have wilted. I guess it
couldn't hurt


How many cultivars have you tried? How do you know the ones that you have
tried are resistant? Sometimes trial and error is not a bad procedure.

Have you tried taking some of the affected plant to an expert for
identication?

If it actually is a wilt this may help:

http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/3000/3122.html

David



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