Information and discussion regarding garden diseases, insects and other unwelcome critters.
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April 27, 2007 | #1 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Collierville TN
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Mixing Fungicide and Insecticide
Does anyone mix their chemicals to spray their tomatoes. I wanted to mix my Daconil, pyrethrin and maybe even fish emulsion in one sprayer to cut down on the number of times I have to wet the foliage and cut down on time spent spraying.
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April 27, 2007 | #2 | |
Tomatovillian™
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Definitely NO on adding a fish or seaweed emulsion. Do that separately. My advice if you want to foliar feed is to do that the day before you spray Daconil, or put it on first, let it dry/absorb, then apply Daconil. Or alternate weeks with foliar feed and Daconil. On other substances: Depends. In general, probably not. Usually, what I'll do in the case of pesticides (pyrethrins, bt) is to lay down my coating of Daconil, let it dry, then come back and apply the other on top, later that day or the next day. Bt and pyrethrins don't have to be applied to the point of runoff/dripping/rinsing the coat of Daconil off in order to be effective. Having said all that, I have been known to occasionally mix PyGanic (5% pyrethrin) with a Daconil spray with good results. Wouldn't do it with bt though (PH concerns). |
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April 27, 2007 | #3 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Rock Hill, SC
Posts: 5,346
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Suze and I had this discussion the other day.
And I see she got her response in already. Pyrethrin and Neem are oil-based, so I don't know how well they mix with water-based products like Daconil and Fish Emulsion. Also there is the fear that they will burn the plants if applied under sunny skies. Suze suggested that I spray the plants thoroughly with Daconil in the morning, let it dry, and then 20-30 minutes or so later go back with a smaller amount of B.T. spray for the hornworms and fruitworms. Not to soak the leaves but just get some on all the leaves so when the caterpillars eat it, they stop. If you are in a particularly humid climate, then foliar feed may be impractical. I know Earl recommends just pouring diluted fish emulsion directly at the soil line. I suppose if you wanted, you could do fish emulsion one day and daconil the next. This is only my first year trying Earl's method, but it really seems to make sense to me to distribute the nutrients in a cubic foot area around the roots which encourages them to reach out to get them. The even distribution throughout the area should result in an even supply. A side dressing with TomatoTone a few inches from the stem and then watering it in might be good as a boost during heavy fruitset. Last edited by feldon30; April 27, 2007 at 09:37 AM. |
April 27, 2007 | #4 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Hawaii
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April 27, 2007 | #5 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Rock Hill, SC
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Because you want the leaves to be covered with Daconil at all times, and a foliar feed of fish emulsion or seaweed would wash it off. I know every morning lately, we are waking up with dew on the leaves. That can encourage fungus, so even applying foliar feed on Tuesday and reapplying Daconil on Wednesday would mean you have 1 day that the plants were uncovered.
It's hoped, although scientifically untested, that spraying with Daconil, and then coming back and adding a lower quantity of B.T. will cause a layering effect, protecting the plants from chewing AND fungus, rather than the B.T. application washing off the Daconil. I have to say I am impressed at how well my Kimberly has bounced back. Here's how it looked on April 9th after I stripped off 2/3rds of the leaves: It has set another 15 fruit and put on a lot more leaves, none of which show the disease. I have also cleaned up the bottom 8-12" of each of my plants since most of those leaves get Early Blight anyway. People often ask me if I prune tomatoes. My initial answer is No, since I do not actively seek out suckers and pinch them off, but I do pick off 10-20% of the foliage of each plant just to clean the plants up and remove foliage with EB, Septoria, or caterpillar chewing. |
April 27, 2007 | #6 |
Tomatovillian™
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Honu, What type of regimen do you use for disease prevention on your tomatoes. Ami
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April 27, 2007 | #7 |
Moderator Emeritus
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Location: Upstate NY, zone 4b/5a
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All I can add here is that many years ago I called ortho to ask about adding other substances to Daconil and I was told at that time that to do that would decrease the effective ability of the Daconil molecules to attach to the leaf attachment sites where the pathogenic fungal spores must attach in order to germinate and infect.
And I've been giving out that advice online now for at least 10 years now as many here already know. I don't know the reason and rationale re other substances interferring and I'd say that the only prrof you['d have would be by trying this or that. But you've got to know that what you're dealing with is a FUNGAL foliage infection, and Morgan, a quick look at that leaf of yours sure doesn't look fungal to me; it looks much more like Bacterial Spot to me. But I can go back up and take another look if you wish. I'm just running late here this AM and haven't taken my AM pills, so in about 2 min I dissolve into a wee puddle of protoplasm and flow out the front door.
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April 28, 2007 | #8 | |
Tomatovillian™
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April 28, 2007 | #9 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
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And I completely disagree that mixing causes effectiveness to noticeably decrease. In fact, NOT adding a spreader/sticker to the mix will decrease the coverage and protectiveness of Daconil or any other fungicide.
Think about it. You add x ounces of Daconil to x gallons of water. When sprayed there is still the same ratio of Daconil : water. The addition of another liqiud chemical reduces the ratio insignificantly. If you wanted to, you could add a little more Daconil to keep the ratio the same. This thing about receptor sites makes no sense to me either. Every epidermal leaf cell is receptive under the right conditions. That is why completeness of coverage with a spreader/sticker is most important. |
April 28, 2007 | #10 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: NY
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It is kind of a pain to have to spray so many different kinds of chemicals.
Mixing, pumping, storing leftover liquids, washing cleaning the sprayer, etc. Disaster is when you make a mistake and spray "Roundup" on your plants. So I have four separate sprayers, one of them is cordless electric. Life is much simpler now. dcarch
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April 28, 2007 | #11 |
Tomatovillian™
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Location: Germany 49°26"N 07°36"E
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dcarch, I hear you. I have one sprayer whose whole purpose in life is "Roundup".
Honu, Thanks for the info. What are you using for foliar feed now? Ami
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April 28, 2007 | #12 | |
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Take N fixing bacteria as one example. There are specific sites on the roots to which they must attach before they can send an infection thread into the root. And the world of human infectious disease is full of examples about specific attachment sites either being available or not available in order for certain pathogens to be able to infect the person. So I, for one, cannot discount that foliage has specific attachment sites for fungal foliage pathogens, and none of us are privy to the research that ortho has done b'c those kinds of data are proprietary and not divulged for obvious reasons, I think. Carolyn
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April 29, 2007 | #13 |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: NE Kingdom, VT - Zone 3b
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Unfortunately, I still have to disagree. I do know a lot about all the different types of fungul diseases, but admittedly little about Carolyn's field of expertise concerning bacteria and viruses.
When it comes to Early Blight, Septoria Leaf Spot, Grey Mold, Rusts, and the such, there are very definitive "receptor sights". Some are through the stomata, most thread their way between the cell walls, and some pierce right through the epidermis into the plant cells. There is no proprietary knowledge Ortho has or had. Fungi do what fungi have done since creation. The metallic based fungicides that destroy fungal spores in plants are the same metals used in humans when we develop fungal infections. |
April 29, 2007 | #14 | |
Tomatovillian™
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April 30, 2007 | #15 |
Tomatovillian™
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