When it comes to battling fungi, organic gardeners have a limited spectrum of treatments available. Baking soda spray, milk, and a few other household concoctions discourage certain fungal infections, but not all. Bordeaux mixture – a solution of copper sulfate, lime, and water – has been used since the 19th century to control fungal infections of vegetables, fruits, nuts, trees, and ornamental plants, and copper solutions and powders have been used for centuries to control diseases in plants and trees. These natural minerals, when mixed and applied correctly, provide safe protection for your plants and are approved for organic gardening and growing.
In my area of Pennsylvania, we’re no strangers to yearly fungal infections. In the past 8 years, I’ve seen powdery mildew, black spot, downy mildew, early blight, late blight, and a few other infections in my flower beds, fruit trees, shrubs, and vegetable garden. Some could have been avoided by paying closer attention to what I planted where. But others were the result of too much rain, too little sunlight, consistently cool temperatures, or long stretches of high humidity. Some of the diseases may have been brought in on plants from garden centers, or fungal spores may have been airborne, drifting in from infected plants as far as a mile away.
The most frustrating aspect of these fungal diseases is that once they set up residence, the chance of their reappearance in subsequent years is strong, even if you destroy the infected plants. Fungi are notorious for overwintering in soil, or on that tiny bit of foliage you overlooked when it fell from the plant. Given the right conditions the following season, the spores find their way to foliage and reproduce again and again.
Those plants and trees which are susceptible to fungi should be planted in areas with sufficient airflow so they dry quickly after watering or rain (think wide open, sunny spaces). Use native plants whenever possible, as they are adapted to your area’s weather conditions and soil, and some may possess a built-in resistance to your region’s most common fungi. At the very least, they’re better able to survive the infection.
But even the best garden plans go awry during a wet, cool, or consistently damp growing season when even the most resistant plants can become infected. When powdery mildew, downy mildew, blight, and other fungi start appearing in your county, you may want to take preventative measures to protect your garden. Once the diseases appear, little can be done to eliminate them via organic methods, and the best you’ll manage is some degree of control. Copper ions in Bordeaux mixtures and copper solutions impact the enzymes in the fungal spores in a way that prevents their germination. That means these products are most effective BEFORE fungi land on the plant.
Before treatment, prune out as much of the infected foliage as possible and put it in a trash bag, not the compost pile. Then treat the remaining foliage and all of the other susceptible plants in your garden, even if they’re on the other side of your property (I’ve seen powdery mildew hop from my Hollyhocks to my vegetable garden, with more than 35 feet of lawn between them).
For new and intermediate gardeners, I highly recommend that you buy pre-formulated Bordeaux mix, assuming you can purchase it at a garden center in your state (not all states allow its purchase). Even though you can make your own, the correct proportions and dilutions are essential for proper control of fungi and to avoid sending the pH of your soil so high from the lime (alkaline) that you’ll destroy the very plants you meant to protect. Instructions from the University of California on how to make your own Bordeaux mixture are here.
[su_highlight background=”#fffd8c” color=”#000003″]Buy on Amazon: Bonide Chemical 772 Number-4 Copper Dust or Spray,4 lbs
For new organic gardeners, I suggest you purchase a copper fungicide-type spray or dust like this one from Bonide. Copper fungicide can be applied as a diluted solution in water or in a powder form. It is not to be shaken at random over a plant, straight from the bag, and must be applied via a bulb duster like this one.
Directions for treatment are included on every package label or on an insert. It’s essential that you follow the exact directions for the plants you want to protect. The effectiveness of these treatments relies on the proper amount of solution being applied for each species. Too little and it’s ineffective – too much and you risk damaging the plant or soil.
**Note that copper solutions can discolor plant foliage and leave grayish-white spots behind. If you’re treating an ornamental that you’re growing for the foliage, treat very lightly, or not at all.
Eventually, the solution will wash off the plants via rain, and the copper will break down in the soil.
**Please do not indiscriminately spray Bordeaux mixture or other copper solutions on every plant in your garden as a preventative – that is an extremely irresponsible way to use chemicals, organic or otherwise. Only treat the plants or trees which are susceptible to the specific fungal infections these solutions are designed to treat.
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