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						| Peach 
						leaf curl  |  
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						Anthracnose |  
            This week's highlights -- or lowlights 
            By John Fulton 
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            [May 22, 2013] 
            
            What a difference a year makes! Last 
			year we were warm and dry for large parts of the spring, and this 
			year has been cool and damp for the most part. With the type of 
			weather we have experienced, it should have been expected that many 
			different diseases would come our way this spring. Well, they are 
			here. Here are some shorts on the past week and some of the diseases 
			found without looking too hard.  
            Peach leaf curl is caused by a fungus on trees in the stone fruit 
			family. This would include mainly peaches and plums. It is rather 
			striking with the bright red swellings on the green leaves. This 
			disease can only be prevented with a dormant-time application of a 
			fungicide on your trees. Seeing it now means that you probably 
			should have sprayed before the buds began to swell (meaning before 
			leaves actually came out). | 
		
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			 Anthracnose starts as dead areas 
			between leaf veins or on the tips of leaves. When severe enough, 
			leaves will fall. Several of the infected trees have actually had 
			the leaves turn completely black already. On many trees, it is much 
			more noticeable on one side, due to air movement carrying the 
			disease and drying out foliage quickly. The good news is that it 
			rarely harms trees. If enough leaves drop, a new set comes out in 
			four to six weeks and we start all over. The next set of leaves may 
			also get the disease, but they may not. Infection can continue with 
			weather favorable to the disease and when nighttime temperatures 
			stay under 65 degrees. Treatments when you see the symptoms of this 
			disease are simply wasted time and money. Apple scab, a disease similar to anthracnose, can cause premature 
			leaf drop in apples and crabapples. If you are on a regular spray 
			schedule for fruit trees, it should prevent most of the problems. 
			You could also spray crabapples this way, but you would have to 
			weigh the cost and benefit since no fruit production is involved. 
			 As a reminder, spray programs for disease prevention in fruit 
			trees should be applied every 10-14 days after the bloom period is 
			over. It should be stressed that these are preventive programs and 
			not curative. These programs then continue until roughly two weeks 
			before the fruit is ready to harvest. 
			[to top of second column] | 
 Garden update Just to catch up on a few things, we are now ready for the 
			warm-loving vegetables to be planted. This would include lima beans, 
			cucumbers, eggplant, melons, sweet potato slips, and summer and 
			winter squash. You would want to accomplish these plantings around 
			June 1 at the latest for summer harvests. In another two weeks or so, we'll begin planting for fall garden 
			harvests already, with plants such as potatoes, summer squash and 
			tomatoes. You can also do second-crop planting of sweet corn, green beans 
			and cucumbers. Just remember, the length of time between your first 
			and second plantings will not equal the time between the harvests. 
			Heat units and length of night affect the crops. Heat units 
			accumulate much faster during the summer months, and the length of 
			night will be equal on either side of the summer solstice.  
              
            [By 
			JOHN FULTON, 
			University of Illinois Extension] 
              
			
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