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Old September 21, 2006   #1
dcarch
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Default Bio-terrorism! (horrible pix)






In less then a week's time, all plants went from healthy to this!!
In Zone 6, I am supposed to have another month or more of growing harvest time left!!!
dcarch
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Old September 21, 2006   #2
bizzarbazzar
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YIKES. I feel for you...big time
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Old September 21, 2006   #3
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It's not Bio-terrorism; it's late-night frosts!

My weather: National Weather Service - NOAA just type in your zipcode & see yours.

2 Day History

Any temperature below 50º F will cause it on tomatoes.
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Old September 22, 2006   #4
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Thems fryen tamaters. :wink:

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Old September 22, 2006   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Polar_Lace
It's not Bio-terrorism; it's late-night frosts!
Actually, according to my remote recording thermometer, the nighttime temp never went below 63 degrees. It's all kinds of blights and who knows what else.

I am going to need help to do something to sanitize because I don't have space to rotate crops. I have to grow in the same space again.

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Old September 22, 2006   #6
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We used to steam the soil in the nursery beds. Kills everything minus the nerve gas that was my dad's favorite ultimate solution. Do you have time to remove them maters' fry em up and get some plastic over the beds to solarize for a while? Will that kill the pathogens that cause blight anyway?

Haha...when the county took our nursery for flood control, it became a superfund site. Some interesting stories there...
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Old September 22, 2006   #7
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ouuuuufaaaa ~
Not looking so good -
I had a couple looking liek that here in NJ
this summer ...
Had to give the old "yank-a-roo" ...
Fried green maters it was ~

Tom
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Old September 22, 2006   #8
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I can send you about 50 lbs of gun powder.
Just mix it in the soil and light it off, that should the trick.
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Old September 22, 2006   #9
dcarch
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Quote:
Originally Posted by landarc
We used to steam the soil in the nursery beds. Kills everything minus the nerve gas that was my dad's favorite ultimate solution. Do you have time to remove them maters' fry em up and get some plastic over the beds to solarize for a while? Will that kill the pathogens that cause blight anyway?

Haha...when the county took our nursery for flood control, it became a superfund site. Some interesting stories there...
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Old September 22, 2006   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Worth1
I can send you about 50 lbs of gun powder.
Just mix it in the soil and light it off, that should the trick.
You are not that far off. I am trying to find out more about sulfur based fungicide to mix with the soil to sanitize it.

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Old September 22, 2006   #11
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Well if you find something that doesn't sound too difficult, that will work, let me know too. I also have diseased soil now. Bummer!
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Old September 22, 2006   #12
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Not organic, but I just read this on another website, thought it might interest you

Profile: Telone® C-35 soil fungicide and nematicide controls all major species of nematodes, including root knot, lesion, stubby root, dagger, ring, pin and cyst nematodes. The addition of chloropicrin allows Telone C-35 to have significant activity on soil diseases, such as Fusarium, Verticillium, pink root, Phytophthora and Pythium. Telone C-35 is injected into the soil as a liquid and immediately converts to a gas, creating a zone of protection around developing roots. As a fumigant, Telone moves throughout the soil profile on its own, rather than requiring water or incorporation for movement.
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Old September 23, 2006   #13
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The gun powder I have doesn’t have sulfur, it is nitro glycerin or nitro cellulose based.
Smells good too. 8)

I have often wondered if building a big bonfire on the spot would do the trick.
Probably not as the heat would not go deep enough since heat rises.
Im going to check into the tera petra farming the they did in south America 1,000 years ago.
I think that it may be just the thing.

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Old September 23, 2006   #14
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Haven't used it yet, but will be in 2007 as I have heard good things from gardeners about it and googling on T22 shows what appears to be solid research showing it's benefits.

http://www.johnnyseeds.com/catalog/p...ield&item=9346

Utilizes a mycoparasitic fungi to encapsulate the roots of plants. Supposedly this fungi then kills off all common fungal pathogens trying to enter the roots as well as provides some protection from other pathogens.

Evidently I introduced some bad stuff in 2005 because in 2006 I lost all my maters 2-3 weeks ago to some disease or the other that clearly worked it's way up the plant from the soil. Prior to 2006 I considered tomatos bulletproof in my garden as nothing bad every happened to them. Plant and forget really. Not any more. Now there is a war on and I have no moral qualms about using biological warfare. Better than chemical warfare I guess.

If the root shield doesn't work I think I will try pouring gasoline on my soil and lighting it all in fire. Kind of like napalm

Either that or just give up on in ground plantings and grow in containers only. That seems to be the direction I have been moving the last couple years as I find I have much less trouble with container plants than I do soil plants.
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Old September 23, 2006   #15
Worth1
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Well it's not tera petra,
I'll keep looking.
I got tera patric.
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