23,594 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

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reedjj74

I think I might have figured out the problem. I have some younger corn plants that were planted in buckets. One of those younger plants appears to have gray leaf spot on a leaf. Does anyone know of a way to cure my plants of this?

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 1:26PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Who diagnosed GLS? IF your corn has gray leaf spot, and that is a big IF since it is

1) a disease of the Midwest and East coast, not California and

2) there is no sign of it in your pictures, and

3) it primarily affects mature plants and yours are young seedlings

4) yours is a new raised bed not an old possibly soil contaminated one nor a no-till farm

then the only treatment is fungicide sprays such as Daconil. It does not cure the disease it only slows it down hopefully enough to harvest the crop.

Dave

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 3:54PM
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Edymnion(7a)

You're just planting a potato, no oleander. They don't poison the ground or anything else like that.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 2:47PM
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gardenlen(s/e qld aust)

no potatoes will not contaminate, unless they get blight, unlikely though, they will improve soil and decontaminate.

len

Here is a link that might be useful: lens instant potato patch

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 3:04PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

I looked up "reptile light" as most would have no idea what they are - myself included. Apparently they are CFL (compact fluorescent bulbs) and the Reptile 100 is not 100 watts it is only 26 watts. None of the ones I looked at indicate the # of lumens.

Dave

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 2:35PM
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Edymnion(7a)

What you want to look for is maximum lumen rating, and the temperature needs to be "Daylight", not "soft white" or anything else, "daylight".

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 2:46PM
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Ohiofem(6a Ohio)

Lynda: the critical points probably are that you need a container that is at least 20-25 gallons; full sun; fast draining potting mix (not soil); at least a 120-day growing season; and regular fertilizing with a balanced fertilizer containing all the trace minerals. Pumpkins need a lot of moisture and food. I suggest you read the most popular thread in the Container Forum.

Here is a link that might be useful: Container Soils

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 12:47PM
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Edymnion(7a)

For fertilizer, its important not to give them too much nitrogen. Too much N and you'll get tons of vines, and no pumpkins at all (female flowers don't set if there's too much N).

Also, pumpkin vines will want to root along the vine, and that will greatly help pumpkin development. Don't just give it one pot at the base, have a couple of extra smaller pots that you can put the vines in for secondary rooting.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 2:43PM
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drippy(7bAL)

Thanks, nc-crn - will follow your advice. I think they are likely saveable.

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 10:13PM
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skeip

Something I have used for years and it really works. If you take a plastic laundry basket and invert it over a flat of plants you are trying to harden off, it gives them just the right amount of sun and wind exposure. After a week or so, if it's not too windy, I am able to remove the basket. I usually put the flat and basket on my east facing front porch.

Steve

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 1:50PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

You may have to adjust your demands somewhat, make them a bit more realistic.

You want only a local source, already pre-tested by someone who has used it, only a small amount, really good stuff, AND delivered? All that wouldn't be possible in many parts of the country. Is cost a consideration too because all that is going to cost you.

Bagged compost from one of the big box stores may be your best bet for many reasons.

Dave

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 12:28PM
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newyorkrita(z6b/7a LI NY)

I get compost from Fischettis every year. It is very good quality. They sell it by the cubic yard.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 12:52PM
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weedlady(Central OH 6)

I left a couple of my leeks from year before last in the ground just to see the seed stalks--and were they impressive! I saved the seed and those now-4"-high babies will go into the garden this year!
Last season's leeks (I left 2 again) do not seem to have survived the winter--though I have not checked for a couple of weeks.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 8:04AM
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NilaJones(7b)

@florauk: In my experience, they vary from plant to plant. I think some get tougher, younger, and some stay cookable.

Y'all know what's really funny? If you forget about a few leeks and don't pull them even AFTER they drop their seeds, they resprout from the base. In clumps. I should take a pic and post it. I am leaving those to see what they do next :).

Also, for me, leeks reseed themselves. So far I have not needed my backup tray of starts.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 10:54AM
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zeuspaul(9b SoCal)

I would want to know more about the topsoil and more about the compost. Topsoil is very generic. Some venders sell good topsoil and others sell a mixture of sand and composted horse manure and call it topsoil.

Compost is also very generic. Composted sewerage sludge is commonly sold as compost and you probably shouldn't be using that in a vegetable garden. Or it might be green waste which can also be suspect.

Ask the sand silt clay and organic content of the topsoil. Ask about the ingredients in the compost.

Zeuspaul

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 11:20PM
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greenmulberry(5-Iowa City)

I always use just compost in my raised beds.

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 10:30AM
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weedlady(Central OH 6)

I'll bring the vanilla ice cream & be there in a few minutes! LOL!!

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 7:54AM
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pnbrown

Almost gone now so you better hurry...

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 9:09AM
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ltilton

So have you seen any recovery? Like where the poly wasn't touching the plants?

    Bookmark   April 12, 2013 at 6:28AM
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TOTEMs

I'd say I lost 85%

    Bookmark   April 27, 2013 at 5:24AM
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donnabaskets(Zone 8a, Central MS)

These pics are really old, but you can see the structure. I liked the blocks because I was able to install them myself without many tools.

Here is a link that might be useful: My garden in year two.

    Bookmark   April 25, 2013 at 11:09PM
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AT_garden(7A)

I made mine out of the 4x8x16 concrete blocks. I used the "lightweight" blocks for the base layer and then the solid ones for the upper layers.

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 10:19PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Don't know that I have ever seen or heard of short-day varieties in sets? 99% of the ones sold are long-day varieties. Do you recall the names of any of these varieties off hand?

I would have laid it off on Home Depot buying in bulk and shipping them all over the country but the ones sold in our HD here are all long day varieties so it sounds like the HD there must have made some weird, off-the-books purchase.

But I'm not surprised they don't understand the difference between the types. Most gardener's don't either. Or even understand the difference between sets and plants.

But as for one list that covers them all, not that I know of. You can put together a pretty comprehensive list by browsing the varieties offered by the big name US plant suppliers: Dixondale Farms, Browns of Omaha, Piedmont, Territorial, etc. but that doesn't even begin to include all the seed varieties or the set varieties.

Dixondale Farms has some great info and how-to publications you can print out and take to the HD manager if you think it will help. :)

Dave

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 9:30PM
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Raw_Nature(5 OH)

I can put down cardboard or newspaper and layer it over the existing weeds, and then cover that with aged compost etc."

That's exactly what I would do. You are right on my friend. Mow the weeds short, layer newspapers/cardboard, pile with compost, mulch, and plant..

You can plant in that right away, no time to wait.

Joe

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 6:59PM
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NilaJones(7b)

Yes, if you put 4-6" compost on top of the cardboard you can plant same-day.

I do think the flametorch weeder is worth looking into. Less shoveling of compost! You can probably rent one if you have a local tool rental shop.

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 7:50PM
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flora_uk(SW UK 8/9)

OK, in that case it sounds as if something ate them, not that they fell off by themselves.

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 11:59AM
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bktl

I put a barrier of deer netting around and over them to keep what ever critter is picking them apart. I don't think it could be bugs this time of year.

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 12:09PM
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digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

I'm sure they would be and there are many of them on all the various Exchanges forum here as well as on the Round Robin forum that run every year at seed trading time.

The tomato forum even has its own trading/exchange forum which is very active at trading time.

Dave

    Bookmark   April 26, 2013 at 11:03AM
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