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hellibore
i dont know what is causing this can any one help please,all the leaves are affected on some plants, and it looks like it is spreading
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hellibore
"lionrose" solomonsfarm SPAMTRAP @aol.com wrote in message ... i dont know what is causing this can any one help please,all the leaves are affected on some plants, and it looks like it is spreading lionrose What do the leaves look like ? If they are going brown, its a natural thing for them to do. The old leaves die of and can be removed. But there should be new growth visible. Do you have any pictures? Jenny |
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#4
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hellibore
"lionrose" solomonsfarm SPAMTRAP @aol.com wrote in message ... JennyC;738335 Wrote: "lionrose" solomonsfarm SPAMTRAP @aol.com wrote in message ...- i dont know what is causing this can any one help please,all the leaves are affected on some plants, and it looks like it is spreading lionrose- What do the leaves look like ? If they are going brown, its a natural thing for them to do. The old leaves die of and can be removed. But there should be new growth visible. Do you have any pictures? Jenny ty for replying no pics. but this is not normal dying. looks like sun scorching from watering in sunlight , but i haven't. the fawn/white patches come first ,then the holes but no trail for leaf miners lionrose Found this for you which might be of help: Hellebore Diseases and Pests Hellebores are normally healthy plants, however they are occasionally affected by disease or pests. The likely ones, and action to take, are given below. APHIDS These appear in the flowers themselves or under leaves. They are tiny insects which are visible to the eye. Click here for further identification and how to cope with them. BLACK SPOT This is very common with hellebores. It appears as black or dark brown marks on the leaves which enlarge and eventually strip all the foliage from the plant. Click here for further identification and how to cope with this disease. SLUGS Slugs are visible pests and they tend to go for new shoots and sometimes the flowers. Click here for further identification and how to cope with them. VIRUSES Hellebores grown in gardens are not normally affected by viruses. Where they are, they normally appear as distorted leaves or flowers. The plants grow weakly and are prone to other diseases. In the cases the only solution is dig up and burn the affected plants. One new virus to affect hellebores recently is called 'Black Death'. It causes black areas on the leaves, but these are bounded by the leaf veins. Treat as with any other virus. and : http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/A_Wikim...ing/Helleborus http://web1.msue.msu.edu/imp/modzz/00000713.html HTH Jenny |
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