vfem
Garden Addicted
Ok, as I have the WORST of luck with Blight I can tell you what I know.
1st, blight can 'become' airborne once the the fungus that is the blight sends out spores for breeding purposes from the plant hosting it. However, the primary 'blight' lives in soil. 90% of the time it spreads when the dirt it lives in makes contact with the plants leaf bottoms, and not even the stem. The BEST way to prevent blight is to MULCH, MULCH, MULCH. They catch it most often from splash back of dirt onto the leaves of the plant after a rain. Or in this case, we've had so much rain the ground flooded bringing the dirt and blight up with it OVER my mulch and literally half way up my plants. I had like a pond around my garden, 5-6 inches deep for a number of hours before it receded.
There are sprays you can use to get it under control on your plants, and spray for about 7 days. If it rains, reapply. It looks like I got to most of my plants in time, they are already looking better. We're expecting rain tonight though, so I'll reapply in the morning. I may have been too late to save one... but we'll see by the end of the week. I just keep pulling the bad leaves, and spraying.
I would prefer to NEVER spray, but I refuse to let it spread to the ones they don't need it, this will help control spreading either way.
I have learned to not put 'all my eggs in one basket' though from blight. SO I have 4 different locations with different tomatoes in it. Keeps disease spread minimum, and keeps cross pollination for seed saving down to a minimum.
Just get a copper fungicide spray, and spray daily for 7 days... blight is extremely common in wet seasons. Just don't plant in that location (potatoes or tomatoes) for at least 3 years.
Don't worry.... I got your back!
1st, blight can 'become' airborne once the the fungus that is the blight sends out spores for breeding purposes from the plant hosting it. However, the primary 'blight' lives in soil. 90% of the time it spreads when the dirt it lives in makes contact with the plants leaf bottoms, and not even the stem. The BEST way to prevent blight is to MULCH, MULCH, MULCH. They catch it most often from splash back of dirt onto the leaves of the plant after a rain. Or in this case, we've had so much rain the ground flooded bringing the dirt and blight up with it OVER my mulch and literally half way up my plants. I had like a pond around my garden, 5-6 inches deep for a number of hours before it receded.
There are sprays you can use to get it under control on your plants, and spray for about 7 days. If it rains, reapply. It looks like I got to most of my plants in time, they are already looking better. We're expecting rain tonight though, so I'll reapply in the morning. I may have been too late to save one... but we'll see by the end of the week. I just keep pulling the bad leaves, and spraying.
I would prefer to NEVER spray, but I refuse to let it spread to the ones they don't need it, this will help control spreading either way.
I have learned to not put 'all my eggs in one basket' though from blight. SO I have 4 different locations with different tomatoes in it. Keeps disease spread minimum, and keeps cross pollination for seed saving down to a minimum.
Just get a copper fungicide spray, and spray daily for 7 days... blight is extremely common in wet seasons. Just don't plant in that location (potatoes or tomatoes) for at least 3 years.
Don't worry.... I got your back!