Community › Community › Garden Problems › Disease › Garlic Rust
This topic contains 7 replies, has 5 voices, and was last updated by Rhys 9 years, 11 months ago.
-
AuthorPosts
-
17th June 2012 at 1:37 pm #21364
Hi Charles
My garlic has a bad attack of garlic rust so have lifted the bulbs which seem good so I am thinking of curing and storing in the usual way disposing of the leaves so that they do not contaminate anything else.
Will they store just as well as non-infected garlic and can I use some of the cloves for next year’s crop or should I buy new cloves in the autumn?
Thanks
Big D
17th June 2012 at 4:02 pm #23200Rust is not especially infectious and is more a result of stress from dry weather – well it was dry enough here in the hot weather of late May to bring it on here! Some varieties are more susceptible than others and I have more rust on garlic planted early October than on a late October planting.
But is has all grown well and at this time of year I am in no rush to harvest unless plants are really yellow. Yours sounds fine and it should dry and keep as well as normal. I have planted cloves from rusty garlic and had wonderful harvests, and I compost the leaves as well.
17th June 2012 at 6:26 pm #23201Thanks Charles. Sounds like my garlic harvest will be okay and I am pleased to learn that I can save cloves for next year.
I did read somewhere else that low light levels and high rainfall causes garlic rust but you seem to be saying dryness during the growing season.
Big D
8th July 2012 at 2:56 pm #23198hi, i have had rust on my garlic this year in extremely wet conditions. the very expensive ‘white solent’ variety succumbed first, but now the supermarket garlic is too. it’s good to know it’s not that harmful, the permaculture forum people seemed very upset about it!
8th July 2012 at 7:07 pm #23199Usually I have found rust to spread quickly on garlic as soil dries in late April and May. This year my garlic leaves grew orange quite quickly in the briefly dry winds of late May and I was not too worried, but the difference since then was the rust being turned to rot by relentless moisture on all leaves. All my garlic is now harvested and drying, having stopped growing early, but it is mostly alright, about 5% lost its outer sheaths to rot. Solent Wight was indeed badly affected and is on the small side.
Leeks are currently looking good with no rust!
17th May 2014 at 4:27 pm #23202Is there any hope of a garlic harvest having rust so early?
18th May 2014 at 5:04 am #23203Everything is early this spring, rust included! But stems have swollen so much that a fair harvest looks assured, only less big than if the rust was not spreading and I don’t know of any way to stop it increasing, it seems general this year – or does anyone not have it?
Harvest may be a little earlier, say mid June, but let’s see.
4th June 2014 at 11:22 am #23204Last year it was late April/early May so I was somewhat worried. There are bulbs present but the rust is the worst I’ve seen.
-
AuthorPosts
You must be logged in to reply to this topic.