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#1
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Swiss Chard & Beets turning brown
For the past few years, I have not had good luck with my beets and swiss
chard (red variety). The leaves seem to turn brown when they get to be about 4" long, and the plants do not thrive well. Sometimes about half of the leaf on each stem shrivels up to nothing. I've tried planting in different parts of the garden (which is partly shaded), added manure, etc. The soil is relatively good in my garden and the spinach and lettuce do well. I water by sprinkling, but I do it after the sun is down, so I don't think it is sunburn. Also the garden is pretty well protected from wind. I live in Western Colorado, where the soil tends to be a little alkaline. Any help/advice would be appreciated. Thanks, Gary |
#2
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Swiss Chard & Beets turning brown
I am not at all sure, I am in the east and have very few problems with
bugs on swiss chard, I have had some leaf miners, but they plague spinach more....I have friends who have problems with blister beetles but that is later in the season. Boron deficiency has been a problem for me, but I think it tended to show as root problems. Finally consider bacterial blights since you water at night and therefore the foliage stays wet longer. I was raised in SLC UT and know the reason for watering at night, but it does increase disease pressure. Watering in the sunshine will not burn the leaves, at least fro a hardened plant, which only takes a couple of days out of the greenhouse! This message may not help but it will motivate those that know more to contradict me and then you will get lots of info!! "Gary" wrote in message ... For the past few years, I have not had good luck with my beets and swiss chard (red variety). The leaves seem to turn brown when they get to be about 4" long, and the plants do not thrive well. Sometimes about half of the leaf on each stem shrivels up to nothing. I've tried planting in different parts of the garden (which is partly shaded), added manure, etc. The soil is relatively good in my garden and the spinach and lettuce do well. I water by sprinkling, but I do it after the sun is down, so I don't think it is sunburn. Also the garden is pretty well protected from wind. I live in Western Colorado, where the soil tends to be a little alkaline. Any help/advice would be appreciated. Thanks, Gary |
#3
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Swiss Chard & Beets turning brown
"Gary" wrote in message ...
For the past few years, I have not had good luck with my beets and swiss chard (red variety). The leaves seem to turn brown when they get to be about 4" long, and the plants do not thrive well. Sometimes about half of the leaf on each stem shrivels up to nothing. I've tried planting in different parts of the garden (which is partly shaded), added manure, etc. The soil is relatively good in my garden and the spinach and lettuce do well. I water by sprinkling, but I do it after the sun is down, so I don't think it is sunburn. Also the garden is pretty well protected from wind. I live in Western Colorado, where the soil tends to be a little alkaline. Any help/advice would be appreciated. Thanks, Gary Gary, this is probably not the soil, because both like it around pH 7 (so do spinach and lettuce). However, both shade and sprinkling are less well tolerated by chard and beet than by spinach and lettuce. They need more sunlight, and in my case, they develop rot on the leaves when the summer gets humid (I water under the plants with a hose, and never touch the plants, but they still get it). Suggest you try to grow them in the sunniest spot you have away from sprinklers. Keep in mind that their roots go down six feet when the plant is mature (unless you have hardpan). Infrequent, deep watering plus mulch will get them going. It is not too late to start a new batch, in fact you have plenty of time. |
#4
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Swiss Chard & Beets turning brown
"Gary" wrote in message ...
For the past few years, I have not had good luck with my beets and swiss chard (red variety). The leaves seem to turn brown when they get to be about 4" long, and the plants do not thrive well. Sometimes about half of the leaf on each stem shrivels up to nothing. I've tried planting in different parts of the garden (which is partly shaded), added manure, etc. The soil is relatively good in my garden and the spinach and lettuce do well. I water by sprinkling, but I do it after the sun is down, so I don't think it is sunburn. Also the garden is pretty well protected from wind. I live in Western Colorado, where the soil tends to be a little alkaline. Any help/advice would be appreciated. Thanks, Gary Also, the white chard is substantially more productive and easier growing (more tolerant of acid soil and/or cold, in my case) than the red variety. I discontinued the latter years ago. |
#5
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Swiss Chard & Beets turning brown
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