Even though we have received some recent rainfall in the area, we have
also experienced extreme drought for most of this summer, it is very important
to continue watering through the fall and winter months. Water trees, shrubs, lawns, and perennials during prolonged dry fall and
winter periods to prevent root damage that affects the health of the entire
plant. The result of long, dry periods
during fall and winter is injury or death to parts of plant root systems.
Affected plants may appear perfectly normal and resume growth in the spring
using stored food energy. Plants may be
weakened and all or parts may die in late spring or summer when temperatures
rise. Weakened plants also may be
subject to insect and disease problems.
Fall
is also the time fruit tree care is forgotten or neglected, but it’s a critical
time for controlling some of the peach and plum tree diseases to insure a good
crop next year. Applying a copper
fungicide now can stop or at least reduce three of the major diseases that
attack peach and plum trees in Wise County.
Those diseases are peach leaf curl, bacterial leaf spot and bacterial
canker. Timing of the fall spray is
critical for effective control and for avoiding tree damage. Unless applied correctly, copper, a metal,
may cause severe defoliation. Spraying
should be done when 70 percent of the leaves have fallen.
Another
problem many homeowners are experiencing this fall is in St. Augustine
grass. Brown patch is a chronic lawn
problem for many Wise County residents.
This fungal disease is characterized by large, circular, brown patches
of grass. Since it is a fungus,
fungicides can be helpful. Granular
fungicides are easier to apply than liquid and they have longer residual. Inspect your lawn, if the blades pull away
easily from the stem and have a gray, rotted appearance, that is a sure symptom
of the disease.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.