Information and discussion regarding garden diseases, insects and other unwelcome critters.
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May 30, 2009 | #16 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2009
Location: central Ohio
Posts: 11
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thanks all for your replies - i will take everything into consideration when i get to the store.
to ted: we're gonna try & take the kids to see the big chicken this time around...lol i'll definitely wave left as we go by |
May 30, 2009 | #17 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: South Carolina Zone 8a
Posts: 1,205
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May 30, 2009 | #18 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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[soil and fertilizer first; actual disease second]
In general, tomatoes like a nice, loose soil rich in organic matter that is not particularly high in nitrogen. You doubtless have a fair amount of clay in your soil in your location, even if it is not obvious looking at it. That is not necessarily bad, it holds water and nutrients really well in hot weather, but too much clay compared to the decaying organic matter makes a soil that tends to be acid and lacks air space, which annoys soil microbes, plant roots, etc. Your soil does not really look like a virtually all-clay soil, so let us not worry about that for the moment. Here is a fertilizer designed for tomatoes, that has been found to work well in containers, where the soil is not having much of an input to the nutrients available ("old" Tomato-Tone; the new version is different, and the differences have been discussed elsewhere). Notice primarily the N-P-K values, ie nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium: http://agr.wa.gov/PestFert/Fertilize...spx?pname=4739 (The trace elements are significant for the plant, too, but some of them are doubtless available already in an outdoor garden soil.) Contrast this with blood meal: http://agr.wa.gov/PestFert/Fertilize...spx?pname=4749 It is virtually all nitrogen as far as the plant is concerned. If it was top-dressed rather than mixed into the soil, it will take a few weeks to break down and wash into the soil, and you might see some nitrogen deficiency symptoms at first if the soil was not already nitrogen-rich (and if it was, adding blood meal would not be recommended). That one yellow finger of leaf in one of the pictures and the kind of pale color of some of those with the white spots and dead foliage tips looks a bit like nitrogen deficiency, although that problem is going away in a hurry once the blood meal makes its effect felt. Normally high nitrogen fertilizers are not recommended for tomatoes, because the plant's energy and various important nutrients like calcium all go to growing new plant instead of to developing fruit. Fruitset is delayed, and the demand for calcium from new leaves that are developing contributes to Blossom End Rot (BER), a calcium deficiency disease of the fruit. There are other ways for the plant to get BER (large moisture variations and temperature stresses), but it is still a symptom of calcium defiency in the fruit, and high nitrogen soils make it worse (by redirecting what calcium the roots take in elsewhere than to the fruit). You probably want to get a soil test done by a county agriculture extension (they often do them for free, or for a minimal charge, depending on the state). You can ignore their exact recommendations for what to add to your soil, which will be designed for large scale farmers, with an emphasis on chemical fertilizers. You just want to see what the pH is (do you need to add lime) and what the phosphorus levels are (do you need to add rock phosphate). Consider information on nitrogen and potassium supplementary, since those are easy to adjust and are going to change anyway once you grow some kind of crop in a garden. Some things to avoid forever: sulfate of ammonia (all nitrogen and kills earthworms); muriate of potash (all potassium and kills earthworms). There is a product called "Alaska MorBloom", produced by Lilly Miller, that is all phosphorus and potassium. In theory it would be ideal for a garden that had only blood meal added, but the source of potassium in it is muriate of potash, and it is foolish to fertilize a garden with something that kills earthworms when there are plenty of alternatives that do not. Common sources of phosphorus include bone meal, rock phosphate, fish bone meal, superphosphate, and "blossom boosters" (commercial packaged fertilizers high in phosphorus). Fish fertilizers usually have some, too, and dry organic fertilizers like alfalfa meal and seed meals will have some phosphorus. Your best choice here is probably a cup of rock phosphate spread in a circle around each plant about 1' from the stem and worked into the soil up to 6 inches deep. (Bone meal takes too long to break down to add it this late in the season, and rock phosphate lasts longer anyway, for years.) My second choice would be a couple of tablespoons of superphosphate worked into the soil around each plant. Potassium sources include greensand (very slow release, not really useful as a primary potassium source the same year it is added), sul-po-mag (a kind of ground-up rock, lots of potassium, not as slow release as greensand), molasses, potassium sulfate (powder or pellets), kelp meal, and the dry organics mentioned above contain some potassium. Compost and manures usually have a modest amount of potassium as well. Potassium is one thing tomatoes need plenty of, especially when setting fruit. If you could find it, a 5-lb bag of potassium sulfate would probably be perfect for you, working a cup of it into the soil around each plant and scattering a second cup on top of the soil when they start to set fruit. Finding 5-lb bags of it may be hard to do, though. The next size up is probably 50 lbs, and in that quantity the sul-po-mag is probably a better choice (also not easy to find; think nurseries and agricultural supplies). Kelp meal is an excellent fertilizer, but quite expensive. (I only use a little of it in my seed starting mix and around transplanted seedlings. Too expensive to rely on just that for the plant's potassium needs for the whole season.) The blossom boosters are uncool here for various reasons. In the first place, most of them contain a fair amount of nitrogen along with lots of phosphorus and potassium, and you do not need more nitrogen this year (the blood meal is possibly overkill already on that nutrient). Second, they often contain chemicals that are toxic to earthworms, and earthworms are your friends. A potassium alternative would be molasses. Dry molasses (ground grain coated with molasses, found at feed stores mostly) could be mixed into the soil around the plants just like potassium sulfate or sul-po-mag. Liquid molasses (also found at feed stores, much cheaper than grocery store prices), would have to be mixed with water and watered in every couple of weeks. You may find this reasonable to do if you only have a few plants. In sum: you have the nitrogen, but you likely need some phosphorus and potassium as well. Long term, you can amend your garden with rock phosphate and greensand, and cover a lot of bases for 5 years or more. You may need lime, too. Ideal soil pH for tomatoes and many other vegetables is around 6.5, with anything between 6.0 and 7.2 generally usable without losing nutrients to the chemical reactions that occur in the soil outside that range. That is something to adjust gradually, in moderation, a little bit each year. Too high a pH is harder to fix than a slightly low pH. Some growers here use nothing but horse manure and/or compost, mixing it in or top-dressing with it every year, but it may take a few years of amending your soil before it gets to the state where that works for you. There are also no-till growers. They usually grow winter cover crops for various reasons, and my guess is that their native soil already has sufficient phosphorus, so that issue never comes up. A good read from a no-till grower in Pennsylvania: http://www.cedarmeadowfarm.com/Publi...es/News10.html Now on to the disease: The dead leaf tips do look a bit like sunburn, but you can also see those from overwatering if the soil stays wet, with no air spaces around the roots for weeks on end. I bet windburn could do it, too. The white spots are a complete mystery to me. I have never seen them on a tomato plant. Maybe something sprayed on the plant at the nursery that puddled up in spots on the leaf after a rain? I would dig one up, put it in a pot, take it back to the nursery, and ask them if they have any idea what the white spots are. Maybe someone there recognizes it immediately. Good luck.:-)
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-- alias Last edited by dice; June 1, 2009 at 11:00 AM. Reason: sp |
May 31, 2009 | #19 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2009
Location: central Ohio
Posts: 11
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wow thank you...that was extremely informative.
i have a lot to think about & research apparently. who knew a small garden took so much non-dirty work...lol |
June 1, 2009 | #20 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: PNW
Posts: 4,743
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PS: I left out Guano, which may be high nitrogen, high
phosphorus, or both. It is an excellent fertilizer, and the high phosphorus version would be one way to add mostly that to a garden that already has plenty of nitrogen and potassium, but it is quite expensive, even more than kelp meal. It is a fertilizer where you only need a little (where you might have used a cup of rock phosphate or bone meal, you probably use a tablespoon of high-phosphate guano). Like superphosphate and bone meal, its effect is only going to last for one season. I like rock phosphate for more reasons than just the phosphorus and the longevity of it in the soil. It adds a fair amount of calcium, too, without causing any radical changes in the pH of the soil. Growing tomatoes does not have to be complicated. Some people just scatter 5-10-10 vegetable food around, mix it into the soil, plant, and water when necessary. Their soil pH is fine already, they don't have so much clay that roots have a hard time penetrating it, or so much sand that their plants dry out without irrigation, their soil has sufficient calcium and other trace elements, and they don't sweat the earthworms. Having added blood meal, though, your soil is already different than the average garden plot. (There are situations where that is a good idea, by the way, where one has dug or tilled in some high-carbon material like uncomposted leaves, straw, sawdust, wood chips, etc. Bacteria and fungi trying to digest them will suck nitrogen out of the soil the first year, starving the plants. Blood meal's abundant nitrogen compensates for that.) Anyway, the growing tips of those seedlings looked healthy, so at worst you can just cut off the funky looking leaves and see what happens. A suggestion: put 4 aspirins (any size) in a jar of hot water and let it sit overnight. Mix 2 tablespoons of unsulfured molasses in another jar of hot water, stirring until it is dissolved. Once they have both cooled to room temperature, pour them into a 1-2 gallon jug or watering can or whatever, add enough water to fill it up, and water the plants with it. The aspirin will put the plants' immune systems into high gear, and the molasses will give them a nice potassium boost, which generally helps produce healthy plants.
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-- alias Last edited by dice; June 1, 2009 at 11:37 AM. Reason: clarity |
June 1, 2009 | #21 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2009
Location: central Ohio
Posts: 11
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thank you again!...i can definitely do the molasses/aspirin & will try that...as soon as it stops raining *sigh* lol
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