Home fruit spray schedules
By John
Fulton
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[March 15, 2013]
It seems like quality fruit must
be sprayed at the recommended intervals. For apples and pears, we
start with dormant oils, which need to be applied before buds swell.
Dormant oils are usually needed only every two or three years to
provide control of scales and mites. Sure, the populations will
build up in the off years, but they should remain relatively low if
the three-year program is followed. Superior oils are lighter-grade
oils that won’t cause as much burn damage during late spring or even
for in-season use. Superior oils will also provide control of the
mites and scales.
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The first regular spray of the year is applied when the green tissue
is one-half-inch out of the bud. The spray for use by homeowners
usually consists of a multipurpose fruit spray (and sulfur if needed
for powdery mildew). Multipurpose fruit spray has been reformulated
the last year or two to include malathion, captan and carbaryl (methoxychlor
has been eliminated from the mixture). This same mixture would be
used when the fruit buds are in the pink stage -- when fruit buds
show color. After that, persistence and consistency pay off as you
spray with the same mixture about every 10 days until we get to
within two weeks of harvest. In our area, we need to continue
spraying this late because of apple maggot and sooty blotch.
This
spray schedule will also control borers on apples and pears, if you
also thoroughly spray the trunk and main limbs of the trees. On
young, non-bearing fruit trees where borers have attacked, you can
spray the trunks every two weeks during June and July with a
multipurpose fruit spray.
The spray schedule for peaches, nectarines, apricots and plums
varies a little bit. The dormant spray for them uses captan
fungicide. This is the only spray that controls leaf curl and plum
pockets. The next spray is with captan when fruit buds show color,
followed by captan at bloom. When the husks begin to pull away from
the base of the fruit, we would then spray with sulfur, captan and
malathion. This mix would then be used every 10 days or so to within
a week of harvest.
For borers on the peach group, you can spray or paint the trunk
only with carbaryl (Sevin) on June 15, July 15 and Aug. 15. We walk
a tightrope with the loss of some of the insecticides since carbaryl
can cause fruit drop or thinning on the peach group and some apples.
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To-do list
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Finish up pruning
deciduous trees and shrubs. Buds are beginning to swell on early
species. Evergreens should be done in June, flowering shrubs
after they flower, and oaks and trees with high sap-flow rates
(such as maples) in December.
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Get prepared for
the spring turf preparation season. The recommended dates for
seeding, dethatching and aerating run from March 15 to about
April 1.
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Start your own
transplants. The rule of thumb is to allow about six weeks
before you want to set the plants outside. We are in zones 5b to
6a, with the division running through Springfield.
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Look for spruce spider mites. They
begin by mottling needles. They are a major cause of dead areas
in spruce tree foliage. Treat with a miticide if needed.
[By
JOHN FULTON,
University of Illinois Extension]
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