Give it a shot, find out for yourself. In the mean time why would you bring an infected clone into your grow area...quarantine everything until you have cloned the clone.
my plants sap are consistently reading pH 6.2-6.4, I use no sprays that would be used to kill pm, I live in a forest full of pm infected plants, yet my plants have zero pm
simply put when the plant sap is at pH 6.4 the conditions are not right for a pm spore to germinate and/or grow
if pm infects a plant then that was not a healthy plant, while it may appear healthy looks can be deceiving.. it is actually a plant not fit for human consumption, but it's great fungi food..
my plants used to have pm all the time but I got fed up with it and surfed the net a long time before finding the ultimate solution, and as a bonus I got to learn how about soil balancing, high brix gardening and ultimately how to grow the highest quality plants possible
oh believe you me I am very familiar with pm since it was a common occurrence in our gardens for over a decade, but no more.. I use a microscope to check the leaves and they are clean, our plants laugh at pm now.. sure I can post pics but will that prove anything? if you are sincere about learning how to grow poison free medicine you will prove it to yourself bottom line, I am not going to be holding anyone's hand, I can only point to the door and say I've gone through and joined the folks already here and brought others through into the light.. if you want to join us the door is always open, otherwise I suggest you get out of the way because there are many folks willing to learn what it takes to grow the highest quality medicine possible and this is only possible without the use of poisons...
Are you suggesting that my environment is filthy, or that those who consistently experience problems have a filthy environment? Either way, I agree with the statement in a general sense. I would not agree that mine is a filthy environment (my indoor area).
In the meantime, how 'filthy' is it outside? How would one address the 'problem' outdoors? What would *you* do if you observed PM in 30% RH and in full sun?
I hit it with JMS Stylet oil and give a foliar tea of some sort, look toward improving total plant health.
I still can't figure out why I see PM on summer squashes only in late summer, usually August, irrespective of RH or rain. Two years ago we had no rain, yet the yellow crookneck showed PM. Last year I grew only winter squashes--no PM.
Well I wouldn't. I was alluding to more of an experiment that proves that plant sap pH of 6.4 alone is enough to prevent infection. If there is no exposure to a vector then can you actually say it will work as a preventative?
Im not saying that plant health does not go along way to aid prevention but its part of a multi tiered approach when dealing with active pressure from a pathogen.
You guys are both right....lol.Some spores are inhibited by free moisture on leaves while others are favored by wetness on leaf surfaces. Remember, PM spores are EVERYWHERE--said differently, they do not limit their congregation to just dirty grow environments and skip clean environments. The rule of nature prevails: strong & healthy plants survive at the expense of feeble & weak plants.High humidity favors spore formation while low humidity favors spore dispersal.
Then we have the rule breaker....specific plants that have PM issues irregardless of the plant's health (like zucchini)...you know the plants that disregard and ignore the normal PM rules. These are probably less than 20% of the problems (80/20 rule) and I happen to have one of these fussy pussies that if I DO NOT spray with Eagle at the rate of 1ml per gallon of water--PM is all but guaranteed!
In my world, 32 oz of Eagle solution can easily spray 10 to 20 plants (equiv to 40 to 80 plants per gallon)...and based on my calculations, I do not consider this minute dosage (1ml per gallon rate) to be "unhealthy" or "irresponsible" to cover 40 to 80 plants.
If you disagree....fine! But do the math before hyperventilating! How much "poison" is on a harvested bud (60 day flower let's say) if the plant was sprayed in veg at the rate of 1ml per gal @ 40 to 80 plants? Since I yield about 100 grams per plant....then I guess we could divide 1ml of Eagle into 4000 to 8000 grams....hmmmm. How many zeros after the decimal point? Then factor in the half-life/residual, oh there are too many zeros to count....lol! At this point, an accounting term comes to mind, "materiality", is it "material"? Nah.....not in the grand scheme of things.
Cheers!
You know...you are probably more right than I am. For some reason I have been really bitchy the last couple of weeks. I apologize for that shitty answer I gave.
You have to have the proper balance of minerals to achieve that pH of 6.4...for example you could replace Ca cations in the cell with K and still get a 6.4 sap pH. In that case your brix would drop seriously and you could, in fact, get PM.
On the other hand with decent balance Nutri Tech has monitored thousands of samples and has yet to see PM on a plant with proper brix and sap pH.
It could still happen. But mineral balance is a powerful tool and is a much better solution than chemicals.
edit...also once a plant has PM sap pH gets fucked up. So you probably cannot stop an infection in a particular plant. On the other end...high sap pH calls in the insects...you can get insects to leave a plant by adjusting plant sap pH with foliars...seen that one with me own peepers.