Summer Gardening Tips
Along with summer time comes high humidity. High humidity can cause a
lot of problems with the plants in your garden and around your house.
One of the simple things you can do is don't water just before dark.
Make sure your plants are nice and dry when you tuck them in for the
night and you can cut down of the chance fungus being a problem.
One of the more common fungi that I get asked about a lot is powdery
mildew. This appears as a white film on the leaves of ornamental plants.
Dogwoods and Purple Sandcherry are often the victim of powdery mildew.
Powdery mildew isn't extremely harmful to the plants, it's just that the
foliage is damaged, and little growing takes place once it sets in. Your
local garden center will have a general fungicide you can spray if you'd
like to try and control it. Usually once the plant defoliates in the
fall the plant is back to normal.
Summer gardening tips . . .
If you have Perennial Rye Grass in your lawn, and you probably do if
you're in the north, you must be careful not to leave your grass wet at
night. There is a fungus known as Pythium Blight that appears in very
humid conditions. This fungus attacks and kills perennial rye grasses.
Here in the north most of our lawns are a blend of fescues, perennial
ryes, and Kentucky Blue Grass.
If you have problems with pythium blight you will lose the perennial
rye grass in large areas of your lawn, and even though the other grasses
will still be there and fill in, your lawn will have areas that are much
darker green than the rest of the lawn because you will then have
concentrations of Kentucky Blue grass.
You can see this fungus in the early morning. It looks like white
cotton candy laying on top of your lawn. It usually appears along walks
and driveways where the soil is the wet if you have been watering.
To prevent pythium blight water as early in the day as possible.
Summer gardening tips . . .
Another nasty little blight that likes summer time is Fire Blight.
Fire Blight attacks ornamentals, especially Apple trees, Crabapple
trees, Cotoneasters, and Pyracantha. You know you have Fire Blight when
a branch on one of your plants dies and turns almost red. The leaves
usually hang on but turn reddish brown. The damage usually starts out
near the end of the branch and works it's way toward the main stem of
the plant. There is little you can do except prune out the affected
branch, cutting it as far back as possible.
Fire Blight is very contagious to plants so you should burn the
branches you prune out. You should also dip or wash your pruning shears
in rubbing alcohol after each cut to keep from spreading this deadly
fungus.
Summer gardening tips . . .
Unfortunately, I've got one more summer time culprit to warn you
about. It's a handy little fungus that grows in mulch. Actually there
are all kinds of fungi that tend to grow in mulches, and most of them
are really disgusting looking. But this little gem is unique in the fact
that as it grows it tends to swell. Then somehow it manages to explode,
and it will spatter your house with tiny brown specs. The experts have
appropriately named this one “Shotgun Fungus”. Isn't that a cute
name?
These tiny little brown specs will fly as high as eight feet into the
air, and once they stick to your house or windows, they stick like glue.
I know that right now there are people hollering across the house at
their spouse, “Hey, remember those brown specs all over the house? I
know what they are. It's from the mulch!” Tell me I'm wrong, but I
know I'm not.
A lot of people are victims of this nasty little fungus, but they
don't know it. All they know is that there are tiny brown specs on the
house that look like paint. So far they have blamed everything from
spiders to aliens.
There's not a lot you can do to prevent this fungus. I have found
that if you keep the mulch loose so air can circulate it is less likely
to grow fungi. Don't just keep adding layer after layer to the mulch
around your house. You should skip at least every other year and just
loosen the mulch you already have down. If you loosen it and then rake
it flat it will look like you've just mulched. Mulch is great,
just don't let it get packed down hard. Loosen it up at least once
a year.
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