In this Issue:

VEGETABLE NEWS

Vegetable Insect Update

APPLE NEWS

Degree Day Accumulations

Weekly Trap Counts

Apple Scab Infections

STRAWBERRY NEWS

August in Strawberry Fields

Field Days

NOTE: THERE WILL BE 2 MORE ISSUES OF THE NEWSLETTER, AUGUST 30th AND SEPTEMBER 13th.


Insect, Pest Fact Sheets

 

Vol 1 No. 13   August 16, 2004

August in Strawberry Fields

Reprinted from: “Specialty Crops Management Newsletter,” August 2004, by Thaddeus McCamant, Northland Community & Technical College, Detroit Lakes, MN

August is a critical month for strawberry plants. In new fields, runners are growing, and runners need to be aligned at least once a week. Make sure your runners have a chance to peg in this month. Daughter plants that form in August will produce good quality fruit next summer, but daughter plants that form in September are usually worthless. The soil surface should be wet for at least twelve hours for the runners to form roots and peg in. Some growers water at night or during cloudy days so that the soil stays moist for a long period of time.

Nitrogen fertilizer is critical in August. Once the daughter plants have pegged in, you are fertilizing five times more plants than you were in June. Most new fields need 70 pounds of actual nitrogen per year. About half of that should be applied in August. Most renovated fields should be fertilized at renovation and in late August. The fertilizer at renovation helps the new leaves to form. The late August fertilizer helps to form strong plants during flower initiation. The plants will start forming the flower buds for next summer on August 15.

Irrigation in August is critical. The highest water demand for the year usually corresponds to the third week of August. The plants need about an inch and a half of water a week either through irrigation or rainfall during hot, dry August weather.

Look out for leaf diseases on both new and old fields. Moderate summer temperatures can allow powdery mildew to flare up. Powdery mildew causes the leaves to curl up in cup shapes. The lower side of the leaf eventually develops a white appearance. Powdery mildew looks similar to potato leafhopper damage, but leafhoppers have not been a big problem this year. Potato leafhoppers rarely cause economic losses after the middle of August, but powdery mildew can be a problem until late September. Powdery mildew can be controlled with the fungicide Nova.

 

 

 

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSCo-Editors: Bill Hutchison, Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota, hutch002@umn.edu
Jeanne Ciborowski, Minnesota Department of Agriculture, Ag. Resources Division,jeanne.ciborowski@state.mn.us
Suzanne Wold-Burkness, Department of Entomology, University of Minnesota, woldx018@umn.edu

The Newsletter is published weekly from May through August, cooperatively, by the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) and the University of Minnesota (U of MN).  Reports are posted on the U of MN and MDA web sites on Fridays.  If you have suggestions and/or comments, please send your contributions by 4 p.m., Tuesday to Jeanne Ciborowski, 651-297-3217, jeanne.ciborowski@state.mn.us , MDA, 90 W. Plato Blvd., St. Paul, MN  55107-2094.  You can access the Newsletter at the U of MN web site in htm. format at: www.vegedge.umn.edu/MNFruit&VegNews/mnindex.htm and at the MDA web site in pdf. format at: www.mda.state.mn.us/biocon/fruitreports/default.htm

Partial funding for this publication is provided through partnership agreements with the Minnesota Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association and the United States Department of Agriculture – Risk Management Agency (RMA) and the RMA Community Outreach and Assistance Partnership Program.  These institutions are equal opportunity providers.DISCLAIMER

References to products in this publication is not intended to be an endorsement to the exclusion of others which may have similar uses.  Any person using products listed in this publication assumes full responsibility for their use in accordance with current manufacturer directions.

       

            


Last Revised August 13, 2004.
The University, including the Minnesota Extension Service, is an equal opportunity educator and employer. ©1999-2004 Minnesota Extension Service, University of Minnesota. All rights reserved. Contact copyright@extension.umn.edu for information on reproduction or use of this material.