Aster Yellows Disease - 😱🌸😢
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- Опубликовано: 29 сен 2021
- One of my plants has Aster Yellows Disease. What is it, and how should I deal with it? Come with me and let's see!
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Your brave to replant so soon after the removal. I’m just getting rid of all my 4-5 year old coneflowers (all 7). They were big and full. I’m treating the soil and will see what I’ll do next spring. So upsetting!
Wow, so sorry this has happened. I’ve never heard of that but remember you showing how that plant was different.
Reminds me of "one of these things is not like the others" and dog-gone-it Jenny had to drag herself to the Nursery again to make sure the O.G. Cone Flower had appropriate companions : -)
Well, yes, of course I had to go to the nursery again! haha.
Glad you brought this up,we need to watch out for it .
Yep!
Good info!!!
And, I really do love your pink hat 😍
Thank you!!
This is good information - thanks bunches. Happy gardening!!
Glad it was helpful!
Good to know. I've never heard of that before.
Glad it was helpful.
The coneflowers look lovely together Jenny 💕
Thank you!
I think I might have that problem on my cherry brandy rudbeckia. After watching your video I went back out to look at it again and the flower was definitely deformed and growing in a cluster. This is so frustrating because these plants came in biodegradable pots but the plants suffered so I took them out and replanted them. I lost 1 of the three and now this will be 2 of 3 and this was the one that was growing the best.😟 Maybe it's time for a different plant. I wanted this rudbeckia because I'm not a fan of the traditional black eyed susan. Oh well somethings always changing in the garden.
Thanks for the video!!
Keep trying! This disease is frustrating, but the plants are worth it!
Good information. And yes. Nothing is perfect! I will keep my eye out for possible diseases. Blessings!
Thanks for watching!
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Your'e welcome. :-)
I had never heard of aster yellows before this year. I had a cone flower that definitely had aster yellows this spring, I pulled it and went on thankful it was gone. I am glad you addressed it so others are aware. Thank you and I enjoy your videos and your humor.
Thanks for watching!
At least you caught it…hopefully! I love coneflowers!
yes, hoping so!
I think I had this on a Cheyenne Spirit coneflower. It had mutated flowers just like that. It died on its own,but terrific information. Thanks, Jenny!!
Thanks for watching!
Imperfection is perfect, they look so pretty.
Thank you! And I agree - imperfection is perfect!
Wow, good information! So sorry! I have some pow wow cone flowers that the leaves are moldy/white looking but the plant keeps growing. Strange
That's probably powdery mildew, which I also have on other coneflowers. Hot, humid weather brings that, pretty unavoidable in my area.
The research I read said that the bacteria is still in the plant and not to compost but put it in a tightly seal plastic bag and put it in the garbage.
Thank you for this video, Jenny. I have to admit, when I first watched it I thought it was rather drastic to remove the coneflower plants completely. I've been having similar symptoms on my coneflower plants, so decided to research this myself. Well, after reading up on this and what it can do to other plants in my garden, I've dug up and thrown away 8 plants so far. Later this fall I will dig up and throw away the rest. Sadly, I bought 4 new coneflower plants about 6 weeks ago that came to me healthy and are already showing disease. Which is consistent with how quickly aster yellows can show up after spreading. I'll be watching my other plants for signs of this disease and remove as needed. Again, thank you!
I'm so sorry you have lost so many plants! That's so frustrating!
@@HarmonyHillsHomeandGarden I've decided to look at this as an opportunity to freshen up my gardens with some new plants. That's always fun!! And hopefully when I add coneflowers back in the future I can have beautiful blooms again!
Boy I tell ya, between the diseases and insects and the weather and the birds and all the other critters... gardening ain't for sissies. I planted some astilbes last spring and some type of wilt took them out 💔
Too true! 😭 A gardener needs to be both an undertaker and a healer. I brought back three astilbe from the brink. R.I.P to the other two. 🪦
@@willaerley7140 😊 lol
It's always something!!!
Hi Jenny, I love your channel and I too, just had to deal with aster's yellow. I was informed that you get the plant affected off of your property though by putting it in a trash bag and disposing of it. I might be wrong, but I was told that by three sources. I just don't want you running into any future problems, especially if it is a mite issue.
You definitely don't want any future issues with your compost.
Here's the info I found that said composting was ok: extension.umn.edu/plant-diseases/aster-yellows
Good information! I have controlled spider mites on daylilies by hitting them with sprays of water every day for a few days. Are these mites controllable in the same way? Do leafhoppers live in the ground?
I'm not really sure, sorry. The articles I read didn't really say.
Aster yellows can be tricky to recognize in my experience due to some of the signs being so similar to other conditions (e.g. chlorosis) until flowering. One of my rudbeckia became stunted after a few weeks in the ground last year due to what I think were mites and treated for them. That plant is looking really really great now... There was a drought in 2020 which lead to dust and thereby mites being a real issue...
Good to know, thanks for the added info!
What did you use to treat for mites?
I largely rely on birds and other beneficial to manage predatory insects but with a very small number of plants - including some cultivars of rudbeckia and lupines, I get the spray out sparingly - in this case I used an OMRI Safer Tomato and Veg spray which contains an insecticidal soap and pyrethrins….
If it's only been in the ground a couple of weeks the Echinacea might have got the disease from a previous place it resided. It just doesn't seem like the plant would be that malformed in such a short time. Thanks for the tip, I saw another YT video with what seems like the same issue and the gardener chuckled saying the flower couldn't make up it's mind since the bloom had two very distinct looks separated exactly in half of the bloom (1/2 of the bloom was white and the other 1/2 was deep red.) I thought it looked kind of neato, unfortunately yours does not :- (
Today I was researching yellow rust fungus that affects grass and can be spread by the fungus hitching a ride on shoes, the mower etc transferring contagious spores all over. The grass Yellow Rust Fungus is caused by too much watering in a highly humid environment, treatment is to dry it out the soil, lavish the infested areas with Nitrogen then water, water, water and finally mow, mow, mow until it's grown out (the grass in this case is not composted rather burned or garbaged.)
Pretty sure it was diseased when I planted it, because no others in my garden seem to be infected.
Can you take the infected cone flower back to where you bought it? It may have been infected at the place you bought it from?🌺💚🙃
I didn't even think about that... it was from Lowe's and I'm sure they'd say "oh well, too bad." But yes, I think it was infected before I got it, and I didn't notice.
My first experience with aster yellows was six years ago when we moved to a different home. I had to look it up, too, because I'd never seen it before and I had coneflowers for years in my previous home with no problems. I still have coneflowers but have not invested a lot of money in them, as I have pulled out three or four just this season. I dispose of them by bagging them up and putting them in the garbage. I'm not sure how long the coneflowers can have the disease before it starts showing, and I'm curious as to whether reseeded plants will have the disease if they come from a diseased plant. I have a LOT of reseeded coneflowers, which is why I haven't bought any new ones in a while. I've even been digging them up and giving them away because I have so many, which turns out to be a good thing! I have read that the disease can spread to any flower in the daisy or aster family, which is really concerning because I have many of those.
Sounds ike you have a lovely collection of coneflowers! Not all towns will allow yard waste in the garbage. According to Minnesota Extension services, compost works fine on this particular disease.
@@HarmonyHillsHomeandGarden My original purple, Powwow Berry and Cheyenne Spirit have all reseeded. My white and green ones do not.
Interesting. I’m going to be more careful when shopping the clearance racks. I don’t want to bring home a plant disease.
me too. Though these weren't clearance plants. But yes, I will inspect more carefully now!
I posted a link to a pic of aster yellows & mite damage. I don't see it here. Did you or RUclips delete it?
No, I didn't see it and I didn't delete it. Try again?
Do you think that the plant was infected when you bought it?
Probably, but I'm not sure. But I haven't seen it on any of my other plants, so I think it was probably infected when I got it.
Are you sure you should have put a diseased plant in your compost pile?! I believe you're supposed to throw it away. Thanks for the great content! 😊
The research I read said that compost was fine, because the bacteria dies when the plant dies. extension.umn.edu/plant-diseases/aster-yellows
Can it affect humans if they consume the plant?
Hm, good question, but I doubt it. but I'm not sure.
Not funny. Hope you nipped this problem early enough. Now I know what was wrong with my coneflowers a few years ago- I got rid of it right away and never had anymore issues. Hope it’s the same for you🤗
Fingers crossed!