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#1
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![]() Sorry, I'm kind of new to gardening. I have some newly prepared beds to plant vegetables in. A friend has offered me a load of free strawberry plants, after she thinned out her own crop on her allotment. The trouble is, they all have leaf spot. Some of the smaller leaves have no visible infection, but they are few. Should I destroy the lot? I don;t want the ionfection to spread to other vegetables and fruit trees etc. Is it likely to? I'm not all that mad on strawberries anyway.... Many thanks JD |
#2
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On 11 Oct, 11:20, JakeD wrote:
Sorry, I'm kind of new to gardening. I have some newly prepared beds to plant vegetables in. A friend has offered me a load of free strawberry plants, after she thinned out her own crop on her allotment. The trouble is, they all have leaf spot. Some of the smaller leaves have no visible infection, but they are few. Should I destroy the lot? I don;t want the ionfection to spread to other vegetables and fruit trees etc. Is it likely to? I'm not all that mad on strawberries anyway.... Rain and wet conditions emplify the problem, the disease, if deseased, spreads quicker. The fungi will spread to the smaller leaves (it enters via the stomata - the underside of the leaves and eventually gets to the crown and rot the lot). You'll still get some flowers next year, and some fruits, but hardly anything and your bed will look poorly. Also spots can be a sign of sress - the plants got too dry, then water logged. I don't use fungicides - and now is the wrong time to do anything about it, like asking your friend on her allotment to move her strawberries! Finally, people forget to rotate their strawberries - by that I mean crop rotation and they keep a strawberry bed for years when they shouldn't for more than 3 or 4 years. Like with any other crops, if you keep growing the same food stuff in the same place year after year, deseases will occur, settle and spread. I would take out and burn all the affected leaves, and plant individually the little plants in pot of compost and leave them out, in a frost free place. See how they develop. If the desease spreads, burn the lot. If not, plant them out and away you go. |
#3
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#4
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On Oct 11, 10:15 pm, JakeD wrote:
Do you think it is safe to put the affected leaves in my compost bin? I wouldn't just in case. It's almost time for bonfire night ;o) |
#5
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#6
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On Sun, 14 Oct 2007 17:13:49 GMT, Pam Moore
wrote: I always cut most of the leaves off my strawberries, usually in Aug/Sept, but this year in October! Then in Spring they make healthy new growth. If you don't want them, I'm sure you will not have much difficulty finding someone who does. It is a similar thing with Hellebores. The old leaves often get leaf spot, and it is usual to cut off all the old leaves at the end of the year, so that the flowers, followed by new leaves, can come up unimpeded. I hope so. Is it true that spraying leaves with comfrey tea keeps fungal infections at bay? JD |
#7
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On Oct 14, 8:20 pm, JakeD wrote:
I hope so. Is it true that spraying leaves with comfrey tea keeps fungal infections at bay? Yes. There's been lots of proven examples and not only as a fungicide/ pesticide but also as a natural fertilizer. Start doing your brew next spring with the young leaves - smells really bad though ;o) |
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