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Old 11-08-2004, 03:52 PM
ben polit
 
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Default spotty mildew on cucumber

Any suggestions for treating spotty mildew on cucumber?
Any dos and don'ts to help prevent it?
Please email me.
Thanks!


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Old 11-08-2004, 06:23 PM
nutNhoney
 
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ben polit wrote:

Any suggestions for treating spotty mildew on cucumber?
Any dos and don'ts to help prevent it?
Please email me.
Thanks!


Bravo works well to prevent mildew if you are not doing organic
gardening. A milk solution applied 3 times works well if your are doing
organic gardening. When watering, water early in the day so the leaves
have a good chance of drying. I have a bit on the cucumbers and
squashes. I removed the worst leaves then used the milk treatment. I
used about 250 ml milk to L of water. HTH
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Old 14-08-2004, 07:28 AM
Susan K. Wehe
 
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I would absolutely stick with the baking soda suggestion as most commercial
fungicides can't be sprayed this close to a harvest and can be dangerous to use.



susan, I'd really prefer the mildew to some of the sprays stores sell... always
read the label!

TQ wrote:

"ben polit" wrote in message
...
| Any suggestions for treating spotty mildew on cucumber?
| Any dos and don'ts to help prevent it?
| Please email me.
| Thanks!
|
|
You must use a fungicide to control mildew. There are several commercially
available products available or you can make your own by mixing a heaping
tablespoon of baking soda with a gallon of water. Whatever solution you
decide to use, spray the leaves until they drip. The commercial stuff sould
be sprayed every seven days and the baking soda once every three or four
days.

--
TQ


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Old 14-08-2004, 03:10 PM
TQ
 
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Any commercial fungicide I have ever used listed 'days to harvest' as zero.
--
TQ

"Susan K. Wehe" wrote in message
...
| I would absolutely stick with the baking soda suggestion as most
commercial
| fungicides can't be sprayed this close to a harvest and can be dangerous
to use.
|
|
|
| susan, I'd really prefer the mildew to some of the sprays stores sell...
always
| read the label!
|
| TQ wrote:
|
| "ben polit" wrote in message
| ...
| | Any suggestions for treating spotty mildew on cucumber?
| | Any dos and don'ts to help prevent it?
| | Please email me.
| | Thanks!
| |
| |
| You must use a fungicide to control mildew. There are several
commercially
| available products available or you can make your own by mixing a
heaping
| tablespoon of baking soda with a gallon of water. Whatever solution you
| decide to use, spray the leaves until they drip. The commercial stuff
sould
| be sprayed every seven days and the baking soda once every three or four
| days.
|
| --
| TQ
|


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Old 14-08-2004, 11:19 PM
TQ
 
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Default

I am using it this year on squash and it seems to be providing good control.
Wx has been wet again this summer in VA Zone 7.

Here/s a Google link where you can read all about it. Several scientific
studies have been done showing its ability to control the disease.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...baking+soda%22

--
TQ

"Rick" wrote in message
...
|
| Exactly, Fungicides on *skinned* fruit like cukes and tomatoes rinses
| off with no residual toxicity. They are wetable powders and not
| systemics and do not enter the fruit. On other rough skinned produce
| like green beans, there is usually a 7-4 day waiting period. Still, I
| am interested in the baking soda idea because it sounds cheap and
| easy. Is it really effective against mildews?
| -Rick
|
| On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 10:10:20 -0400, "TQ"
| wrote:
|
| Any commercial fungicide I have ever used listed 'days to harvest' as
zero.
|




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Old 16-08-2004, 03:10 PM
Liashi
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"TQ" wrote in message ...
I am using it this year on squash and it seems to be providing good control.
Wx has been wet again this summer in VA Zone 7.

Here/s a Google link where you can read all about it. Several scientific
studies have been done showing its ability to control the disease.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...baking+soda%22

--
TQ

"Rick" wrote in message
...
|
| Exactly, Fungicides on *skinned* fruit like cukes and tomatoes rinses
| off with no residual toxicity. They are wetable powders and not
| systemics and do not enter the fruit. On other rough skinned produce
| like green beans, there is usually a 7-4 day waiting period. Still, I
| am interested in the baking soda idea because it sounds cheap and
| easy. Is it really effective against mildews?
| -Rick
|
| On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 10:10:20 -0400, "TQ"
| wrote:
|
| Any commercial fungicide I have ever used listed 'days to harvest' as
zero.
|


Yes, I found that the baking soda treatment was easiest. Couldn't seem
to get results with the milk, perhaps I was doing something wrong as I
only sprayed once.

At our local graden certan, the man there recommended something called
"Wilt-Pruf" It is supposed to be totally organic and safe. Supposedly
it gives the leaves a coating and can help prevent powdery mildew. You
can also mix pesticides with it so they stay longer. I don't know what
anyone else has experienced with it, but I mixed it and neem oil into
water and applied it to my pumpkin plant. The mildew never came back
where mixture was sprayed. Unfortunately the plant was doomed as it
had already been infested with vine borers, but that's another story.
I plan to try just useing wilt-pruf alone next year.
  #7   Report Post  
Old 16-08-2004, 03:10 PM
Liashi
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"TQ" wrote in message ...
I am using it this year on squash and it seems to be providing good control.
Wx has been wet again this summer in VA Zone 7.

Here/s a Google link where you can read all about it. Several scientific
studies have been done showing its ability to control the disease.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...baking+soda%22

--
TQ

"Rick" wrote in message
...
|
| Exactly, Fungicides on *skinned* fruit like cukes and tomatoes rinses
| off with no residual toxicity. They are wetable powders and not
| systemics and do not enter the fruit. On other rough skinned produce
| like green beans, there is usually a 7-4 day waiting period. Still, I
| am interested in the baking soda idea because it sounds cheap and
| easy. Is it really effective against mildews?
| -Rick
|
| On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 10:10:20 -0400, "TQ"
| wrote:
|
| Any commercial fungicide I have ever used listed 'days to harvest' as
zero.
|


Yes, I found that the baking soda treatment was easiest. Couldn't seem
to get results with the milk, perhaps I was doing something wrong as I
only sprayed once.

At our local graden certan, the man there recommended something called
"Wilt-Pruf" It is supposed to be totally organic and safe. Supposedly
it gives the leaves a coating and can help prevent powdery mildew. You
can also mix pesticides with it so they stay longer. I don't know what
anyone else has experienced with it, but I mixed it and neem oil into
water and applied it to my pumpkin plant. The mildew never came back
where mixture was sprayed. Unfortunately the plant was doomed as it
had already been infested with vine borers, but that's another story.
I plan to try just useing wilt-pruf alone next year.
  #8   Report Post  
Old 16-08-2004, 03:10 PM
Liashi
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"TQ" wrote in message ...
I am using it this year on squash and it seems to be providing good control.
Wx has been wet again this summer in VA Zone 7.

Here/s a Google link where you can read all about it. Several scientific
studies have been done showing its ability to control the disease.

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&i...baking+soda%22

--
TQ

"Rick" wrote in message
...
|
| Exactly, Fungicides on *skinned* fruit like cukes and tomatoes rinses
| off with no residual toxicity. They are wetable powders and not
| systemics and do not enter the fruit. On other rough skinned produce
| like green beans, there is usually a 7-4 day waiting period. Still, I
| am interested in the baking soda idea because it sounds cheap and
| easy. Is it really effective against mildews?
| -Rick
|
| On Sat, 14 Aug 2004 10:10:20 -0400, "TQ"
| wrote:
|
| Any commercial fungicide I have ever used listed 'days to harvest' as
zero.
|


Yes, I found that the baking soda treatment was easiest. Couldn't seem
to get results with the milk, perhaps I was doing something wrong as I
only sprayed once.

At our local graden certan, the man there recommended something called
"Wilt-Pruf" It is supposed to be totally organic and safe. Supposedly
it gives the leaves a coating and can help prevent powdery mildew. You
can also mix pesticides with it so they stay longer. I don't know what
anyone else has experienced with it, but I mixed it and neem oil into
water and applied it to my pumpkin plant. The mildew never came back
where mixture was sprayed. Unfortunately the plant was doomed as it
had already been infested with vine borers, but that's another story.
I plan to try just useing wilt-pruf alone next year.
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