Question
My squash plants turned white and wilted this summer. What happened?
Answer(s)
Your squash plants were infested with a disease called powdery mildew, which can be common in
Initial infection occurs via airborne spores from neighboring plants. The disease can develop very quickly once infection occurs, and is first visible on the shaded undergrowth, where leaves are dense, light is low, and humidity is moderate. The infected leaves will turn yellow, wither, and die.
The best way to manage powdery mildew in the future is prevention. Once infection has occurred, there is no way to “cure” that plant. Use powdery mildew-resistant cultivars of squash and other cucurbits. Examples include ‘sungold’, ‘sunray’, and ‘success’ summer squashes, ‘payroll’ and ‘ambassador’ zucchinis, and ‘table star’, ‘bugle’, and ‘celebration’ winter squashes. In fall, remove and destroy all infected plant material—do not till the debris from your vegetable garden into the soil. In the spring, start your plantings in a healthy, rich soil, and use wide spacing. During the growing season, improve air circulation around the plants by keeping the area weed-free, and avoid over-head watering and excessive fertilization.
Monitor your plants throughout the summer for infection. If you notice any spotting or curling of the foliage, or circular white patches on the leaves, remove the leaves or plant. At this time, start applying preventative fungicide sprays every 2 weeks. Examples include neem oil and sulfur. Research has shown that a combination of baking soda and horticultural oil can prevent infection (1 tbs. baking soda and 2.5 tbs. oil in one gallon of water).
Other Questions In This Topic
- How do I control field bind weed?
- Do you have information on average last spring freeze dates in Utah?
- I would like to plant red seedless grapes. What time of the year and what variety work in Utah.
- I have some shrubs that have been dying off in a wierd manner. Just sections at a time will completly die in a matter of a day or so, not even time to try and treat it. There are no outward signs of bugs and the rest of the shrub will be perfectly healthy. It has done this to more than one of my shrubs and also done this to more than one kind of shrub. It started last summer where I lost part of a couple and one hole shrub. I thought I had it taken care of by the end of the summer but when I mowed last week for the first time I noticed I have almost totaly lost another and there are spots on some others. The plants have been here for as many as 10 years or so and are very well taken care of. The only thing I can think of is about 3 years ago I put new plastic down and new bark, could the new plastic cause this.
- When do I harvest my pumpkins or squash?
- I was wondering if you could tell me where to find the planting schedule for Utah. Could you also tell me gardening plants that tend to grow better than others here in Utah? Thank you
- Are there any crops I can plant now (mid-July) in my garden as my early vegetables finish? My sugar snap peas, onions, beets, spinach, etc. have all left empty space in the garden I'd like to put to use. What are the best choices for fall harvest in the Salt Lake Valley?
- I am having frustrations on how to water my tomatoes, some people say every 8-10 days, some every 2. Mine that get hit by sprinklers every 2-3 days at least have small green fruit my other bushes have only little buds and no fruit can you please clarify. Also I have one cherry tomato in a pot should that be watered differently than garden tomatoes?
