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Mila2015 13-09-2016 02:56 PM

Cherry Laurel with powdery mildew and shothole
 
Hello,
I need your wisdom and advise. We live in London and have a mature Cherry Laurel hedge in front of our house, currently at 8ft tall. For the past year or two it is unfortunately suffering badly from powdery mildew and shothole .
We haven't done much about it as we read there isn't much you can do to cure it. We don't have a gardener and we usually trim the hedge once a year in late spring when the new leafs become too much. Unfortunately this leaves us with the old, damaged leafs for the summer.
A gardening company is doing some work currently in houses near us and they noticed our sick hedge and offered to hard trim it, removing the damaged leafs ( most of them now ). My question is this: is now a good time for hard trimming of Cherry Laurel hedge? When is the best time to do it and try to improve the overall health and minimize the powdery mildew effect and the shothole?
Any advise will be much appreciated.

Mila

David E. Ross[_2_] 13-09-2016 03:52 PM

Cherry Laurel with powdery mildew and shothole
 
On 9/13/2016 6:56 AM, Mila2015 wrote:
Hello,
I need your wisdom and advise. We live in London and have a mature
Cherry Laurel hedge in front of our house, currently at 8ft tall. For
the past year or two it is unfortunately suffering badly from powdery
mildew and shothole .
We haven't done much about it as we read there isn't much you can do to
cure it. We don't have a gardener and we usually trim the hedge once a
year in late spring when the new leafs become too much. Unfortunately
this leaves us with the old, damaged leafs for the summer.
A gardening company is doing some work currently in houses near us and
they noticed our sick hedge and offered to hard trim it, removing the
damaged leafs ( most of them now ). My question is this: is now a good
time for hard trimming of Cherry Laurel hedge? When is the best time to
do it and try to improve the overall health and minimize the powdery
mildew effect and the shothole?
Any advise will be much appreciated.

Mila


In the early spring while it is still dormant and out of leaf, spray it
with a mixture of dormant oil and copper sulfate, with a little liquid
soap in the mix as a wetting agent. Repeat just before the flower buds
open.

No, I do not know if dormant oil or copper sulfate are available in the
UK. In the US, I mix half of what I need of each (e.g., 2 quarts of
each). Then I combine the two batches (e.g., to make a gallon) and add
the soap. I also use this on my roses and grape vines, but I spray them
only once, while they are dormant.

--
David E. Ross
Climate: California Mediterranean, see
http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html
Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary

Jeff Layman[_2_] 14-09-2016 07:23 AM

Cherry Laurel with powdery mildew and shothole
 
On 13/09/16 15:52, David E. Ross wrote:
On 9/13/2016 6:56 AM, Mila2015 wrote:
Hello,
I need your wisdom and advise. We live in London and have a mature
Cherry Laurel hedge in front of our house, currently at 8ft tall. For
the past year or two it is unfortunately suffering badly from powdery
mildew and shothole .
We haven't done much about it as we read there isn't much you can do to
cure it. We don't have a gardener and we usually trim the hedge once a
year in late spring when the new leafs become too much. Unfortunately
this leaves us with the old, damaged leafs for the summer.
A gardening company is doing some work currently in houses near us and
they noticed our sick hedge and offered to hard trim it, removing the
damaged leafs ( most of them now ). My question is this: is now a good
time for hard trimming of Cherry Laurel hedge? When is the best time to
do it and try to improve the overall health and minimize the powdery
mildew effect and the shothole?
Any advise will be much appreciated.

Mila


Avoid heavy trimming (see RHS link below). This is important as the
current unseasonal and extremely high temperatures in London will stress
the plant even more.

In the early spring while it is still dormant and out of leaf,


In the UK, cherry laurel (Prunus laurocerasus) is evergreen. Is
something else called "cherry laurel" in the US?

spray it
with a mixture of dormant oil and copper sulfate, with a little liquid
soap in the mix as a wetting agent. Repeat just before the flower buds
open.

No, I do not know if dormant oil or copper sulfate are available in the
UK. In the US, I mix half of what I need of each (e.g., 2 quarts of
each). Then I combine the two batches (e.g., to make a gallon) and add
the soap. I also use this on my roses and grape vines, but I spray them
only once, while they are dormant.


Recommendations for treatment can be found here under "Control":
https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profile?pid=568

The only copper product approved for use in the UK is copper oxychloride
(as Bayer Fruit & Vegetable Disease Control), and that is only for use
on food crops. Use one of the "conazoles" or myclobutanil as recommended
instead.

--

Jeff

Mila2015 14-09-2016 03:30 PM

Thank you David and Jeff,
Do I then wait for the early spring for a hard trim? I need to somewhat trim it now as it is growing quite tall.

Jeff Layman[_2_] 14-09-2016 09:58 PM

Cherry Laurel with powdery mildew and shothole
 
On 14/09/16 15:30, Mila2015 wrote:
Thank you David and Jeff,
Do I then wait for the early spring for a hard trim? I need to somewhat
trim it now as it is growing quite tall.


You can tidy it up a bit now, but no extreme pruning. Next spring take a
third of it off, a third the next year, and the final third the year
after that.

More details at
http://homesteadgardens.com/blog/tim...s-azaleas-too/
opposite the photo "Cherry laurels in bloom".

--

Jeff


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