Posted by Angela Marsh on September 27, 2009, 5:52 pm
I live in a west suburb of Denver, CO.
Cottonwoods are native out here, they were here before western
civilization.
Now they banned the ones that put out the cotton though, and only sell
cottonless types. But they're great for filling in areas and preventing
erosion, as they grow about 5 feet a year.
So a few years ago, I planted 5 of these, to hold an embankment
together. I planted them about 10 feet apart. They grew like crazy, as
you can see.
http://lakewoodcolorado.net/cottonwood/
But now, the 2nd and 4th one ( every other one, which is odd ) has
developed some kind of disease of the leaves and bark, and it's not
something that is affecting the other 3.
On the diseased ones, the bark looks smooth, on the healthy ones it's
thick and grainy like normal.
You can see the disease in the leaves, with the perfectly healthy one
right behind it.
Does anyone know what's causing this, and the cure?
Posted by D. Staples on September 27, 2009, 5:59 pm
http://forestry-dev.org/diseases/ctd/Group/Broad/broad3_e.html
>I live in a west suburb of Denver, CO.
> Cottonwoods are native out here, they were here before western
> civilization.
> Now they banned the ones that put out the cotton though, and only sell
> cottonless types. But they're great for filling in areas and preventing
> erosion, as they grow about 5 feet a year.
> So a few years ago, I planted 5 of these, to hold an embankment
> together. I planted them about 10 feet apart. They grew like crazy, as
> you can see.
> http://lakewoodcolorado.net/cottonwood/
> But now, the 2nd and 4th one ( every other one, which is odd ) has
> developed some kind of disease of the leaves and bark, and it's not
> something that is affecting the other 3.
> On the diseased ones, the bark looks smooth, on the healthy ones it's
> thick and grainy like normal.
> You can see the disease in the leaves, with the perfectly healthy one
> right behind it.
> Does anyone know what's causing this, and the cure?
>
Posted by Sarah Austin on September 27, 2009, 10:00 pm
http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/garden/02920.html
Looks like the Septoria fungus.
Now doesnt fungus need alkaline conditions?
I'm wondering of coffee grounds might make the soil acidic and get rid of
it.
Posted by Billy on October 13, 2009, 4:46 pm
> http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/garden/02920.html
>
> Looks like the Septoria fungus.
>
> Now doesnt fungus need alkaline conditions?
>
> I'm wondering of coffee grounds might make the soil acidic and get rid of
> it.
IIRC it's the other way around. It's possibly due to CO2 released from
decaying organic material, mixing with water to form carbonic acid.
--
³When you give food to the poor, they call you a saint. When you ask why the
poor have no food, they call you a communist.²
-Archbishop Helder Camara
http://tinyurl.com/o63ruj
http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm
Posted by Sarah Austin on October 15, 2009, 12:31 am
>
>> http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/garden/02920.html
>>
>> Looks like the Septoria fungus.
>>
>> Now doesnt fungus need alkaline conditions?
>>
>> I'm wondering of coffee grounds might make the soil acidic and get
>> rid of it.
>
> IIRC it's the other way around. It's possibly due to CO2 released
> from decaying organic material, mixing with water to form carbonic
> acid.
So alast know alalinity might help them?
That's odd, because I understand our soils here are already that way.
> Cottonwoods are native out here, they were here before western
> civilization.
> Now they banned the ones that put out the cotton though, and only sell
> cottonless types. But they're great for filling in areas and preventing
> erosion, as they grow about 5 feet a year.
> So a few years ago, I planted 5 of these, to hold an embankment
> together. I planted them about 10 feet apart. They grew like crazy, as
> you can see.
> http://lakewoodcolorado.net/cottonwood/
> But now, the 2nd and 4th one ( every other one, which is odd ) has
> developed some kind of disease of the leaves and bark, and it's not
> something that is affecting the other 3.
> On the diseased ones, the bark looks smooth, on the healthy ones it's
> thick and grainy like normal.
> You can see the disease in the leaves, with the perfectly healthy one
> right behind it.
> Does anyone know what's causing this, and the cure?
>