A plant pathologist at Cornell University, Sarah J. Pethybridge supplies New York vegetable growers with the information they need to control soilborne diseases and adopt effective management ...
As fall deepens, the number of gardening tasks left to do gets smaller and smaller. Some, like sharpening tools for next year, can be skipped or postponed until spring without serious consequences.
A question we always get is: How do we know if it pays? The tool shown here is a scenario run on corn and soybean acres in Illinois, but can be modified for any crop or application type. If you’re ...
(MENAFN- Kashmir Observer) Srinagar- With weather forecasts predicting rainfall across Kashmir from April 18, horticulture experts have strongly advised orchardists to spray fungicides ahead of the ...
Q: The berries on my Red Flame grapevine are shriveling and turning gray, but the vine looks healthy. Do you know what the problem is? A: Bunch diseases attack only grape bunches. At the beginning of ...
A regular fungicide spray program can often save your garden from many plant diseases like early blight, late blight, leaf spot, downy mildew etc. Don’t worry — fungicides are usually natural organic ...
Q: My black-eyed susans have black spots on the leaf that multiply until the leaf just dies. I've been treating them with a fungicide, but it just gets worse and worse. Is this a fungus or something ...
Gardening Know How on MSN
If your peonies had fungus last year, spray them with this natural remedy now for healthy blooms this spring
Fungal diseases on peonies can cause distorted blooms or no flowers at all. If your plants had problems last year, spray them ...
A plant pathologist at Cornell University, Sarah J. Pethybridge supplies New York vegetable growers with the information they need to control soilborne diseases and adopt effective management ...
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