Information and discussion regarding garden diseases, insects and other unwelcome critters.
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August 18, 2015 | #14 | |
Tomatovillian™
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Alabama
Posts: 7,068
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Quote:
With all due respect to copper as a fungicide it does not control gray mold very well once it gets started on a tomato plant. It does however slow it down some and is better than most other fungicides as a preventative measure. That is why I use Daconil, copper and diluted bleach sprays all season long. After killing back the gray mold I wait a day or two then apply the copper spray at the recommended dose. I grow a lot of black tomatoes and they are especially susceptible to GM so I keep a close watch for the first sign of it which always shows up despite using copper fungicide weekly. I used the copper spray more this year than ever and found it is not so good at preventing Early Blight which is prevented much better by Daconil. Since I grow a lot of plants close together I am usually hit by EB, GM and Septoria at different times almost every year and sometimes all of them at once. I try to alternate spraying Daconil and copper as preventatives and use the bleach spray when diseases show up to stop them if possible. Sometimes I wait too long on some plants and I usually end up with a plant with lots of dead leaves as a result. I now use the bleach spray during long rainy spells a couple of times a week so the diseases don't get ahead of me while the fungicides are washed off. I'm sorry it didn't work for you but I haven't found a foliage disease that it wasn't helpful in controlling other than systemic ones like TSWV if used promptly and correctly. Bill |
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