Posted by Spider on January 10, 2012, 12:18 pm
A few years ago, someone helpfully posted a recipe which used aspirin to
help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
cannot find it.
I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
*very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
(due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
propagating them.
I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
advice? Thank you for your time.
--
Spider
from high ground in SE London
gardening on clay
Posted by Jake on January 10, 2012, 1:07 pm
>A few years ago, someone helpfully posted a recipe which used aspirin to
>help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
>cannot find it.
>I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
>displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
>each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
>*very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
>(due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
>propagating them.
>I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
>find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
>ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
>reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
>Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
>advice? Thank you for your time.
It may be an old wives tale but the "recipe" I've seen is 300
milligrams of soluble aspirin, 2 gallons of water and 2 tablespoons of
mild liquid soap, the latter to help the mixture stay on the leaves.
Spray every 3 weeks.
The main ingredient of aspirin - salicylic acid - was identified in a
Cambridge University study as something in plants' health arsenal.
Deets at
http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/life_sciences/report-27302.html
Cheers, Jake
=======================================
Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.
Posted by Spider on January 10, 2012, 4:36 pm
On 10/01/2012 18:07, Jake wrote:
>> A few years ago, someone helpfully posted a recipe which used aspirin to
>> help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
>> cannot find it.
>>
>> I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
>> displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
>> each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
>> *very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
>> (due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
>> propagating them.
>>
>> I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
>> find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
>> ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
>> reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
>>
>> Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
>> advice? Thank you for your time.
> It may be an old wives tale but the "recipe" I've seen is 300
> milligrams of soluble aspirin, 2 gallons of water and 2 tablespoons of
> mild liquid soap, the latter to help the mixture stay on the leaves.
> Spray every 3 weeks.
> The main ingredient of aspirin - salicylic acid - was identified in a
> Cambridge University study as something in plants' health arsenal.
> Deets at
> http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/life_sciences/report-27302.html
> Cheers, Jake
> =======================================
> Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.
Thanks, Jake, I've noted that and will have a go. That link is very
interesting. I think I'll print it off for future reference. My memory
is hopeless these days. If it isn't written down, it's gone :~(.
--
Spider
from high ground in SE London
gardening on clay
Posted by Dave Hill on January 10, 2012, 1:10 pm
> > A few years ago, someone helpfully posted a recipe which used aspirin to
> > help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
> > cannot find it.
> > I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
> > displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
> > each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
> > *very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
> > (due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
> > propagating them.
> > I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
> > find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
> > ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
> > reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
> > Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
> > advice? Thank you for your time.
> > --
> > Spider
> > from high ground in SE London
> > gardening on clay
> There is no cure for viruses (virii?) in plants (or humans), except
> dig up and burn. That's why people die of AIDS and influenza.- Hide quoted text -
> - Show quoted text -
What you are thinking about is a bit I posted about a customer of mine
who used soluable asprin to dose young plants that were showing signs
of virus.
I was going to try it last year but with things as they were I never
got round to it.
Soluable asprins are cheap,
Salicylic acid is a growth stimulant.
So who knows, it may work, and it.s not going to break the bank
experimenting.
David@ the wet end of Swansea bay
Posted by Spider on January 10, 2012, 4:31 pm
On 10/01/2012 18:10, Dave Hill wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>> A few years ago, someone helpfully posted a recipe which used aspirin to
>>> help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
>>> cannot find it.
>>
>>> I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
>>> displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
>>> each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
>>> *very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
>>> (due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
>>> propagating them.
>>
>>> I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
>>> find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
>>> ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
>>> reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
>>
>>> Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
>>> advice? Thank you for your time.
>>
>>> --
>>> Spider
>>> from high ground in SE London
>>> gardening on clay
>>
>> There is no cure for viruses (virii?) in plants (or humans), except
>> dig up and burn. That's why people die of AIDS and influenza.- Hide quoted
text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
> What you are thinking about is a bit I posted about a customer of mine
> who used soluable asprin to dose young plants that were showing signs
> of virus.
> I was going to try it last year but with things as they were I never
> got round to it.
> Soluable asprins are cheap,
> Salicylic acid is a growth stimulant.
> So who knows, it may work, and it.s not going to break the bank
> experimenting.
> David@ the wet end of Swansea bay
Many thanks, David. I knew I hadn't imagine it! Will give it a go when
growth starts in earnest. I'll report back.
--
Spider
from high ground in SE London
gardening on clay
>help cure virussed plants. I'm sure I marked it as interesting, but now
>cannot find it.
>I have a patch of isolated Leucojum bulbs in the garden which are
>displaying virus-like symptoms. When in flower, the green marking on
>each petal is elongated into a central stripe, which is potentially
>*very* attractive. Sadly, there is some distortion in the flowerheads
>(due to virus?) which spoils their beauty and prevents me from
>propagating them.
>I'm really interested in curing the virus and growing these bulbs on to
>find out if the attractive striping i)persists without the virus, and
>ii)if that striping is generally stable over a few generations without
>reverting to the virussed distorted from, which certainly isn't attractive.
>Does anyone remember the aspirin recipe or, indeed, have any other
>advice? Thank you for your time.