VegNet Vol. 14,
No. 20.
On the WEB at: http://vegnet.osu.edu
In This Issue
1. Drought monitor
2. Crop Reports


Crop Reports by Matt Hofelich,
Mark Koening, Hal Kneen and
Mike Netz
From
southeastern Ohio July 11th 2007
Insect trap monitoring: Helio trap for
corn earworm July 4-11 7 moths captured
Beet army worm July
4-11
0 moths captured
Natural rainfall of 1-3 inches has fallen in the area. Very scattered storms throughout the region. Can
see the physical difference in fields one to two days after rain especially in sweet corn fields. Some corn has
jumped almost a foot in just a few days. Irrigation
continuing especially to apply nutrients under plastic mulch.
Harvesting tomatoes, peppers, sweet corn,
beans and cabbage. Preparing to harvest cantaloupes next week and some
early smaller sized watermelons.
Weeds growing rapidly with the additional
rainfall.
Northern,
Diseases – Downy mildew continues to be the major concern with
growers who are maintaining very tight spray schedules on cucumber, squash and
melons. Environmental conditions existed
over much of the past week that would favor the diseases development. A new case of Downy Mildew was confirmed in
samples submitted from the Castalia,
Insects – There are reports of both Japanese and Western Root Worm
beetle adults clipping silk in sweet corn.
Trap counts for European Corn Bore and Corn Ear Worm are low. Growers report they have noted Potato Leaf
Hopper infestations in snap and wax beans, as well as some pickles. Reports of insect pressure in cole crops and tomatoes remain low.
Dry Weather – Precipitation continues to remain very spotty. Scattered areas in North Central and
Crops – Early sweet corn harvest is in full swing, over all
quality has been good. Whole sale
prices are presently in the range of $3.00 / dozen while retail prices are in
the $4.00 to $5.00 range. Pickle
harvest has entered its second week.
Considering the dry weather growers indicate that pickle yield and
quality over all has been acceptable.
There is concern that the dry weather may shorten the season and impact
overall production. Early processing
cabbage harvested got under way this week.
Reports are that the dry weather has resulted in lower than normal
tonnage for the early harvest.
From
Mike Netz, July 13th
Lots of Bacterial Canker in processing
tomatoes over the last 2 weeks.
It was confirmed by the Omnolyptics lab
in
It has been found in numerous varieties, TSH-4, TSH-16, 9423,
9364, GEM 818, 611, H-3402 to name a few.
It has come in fast & hard, nothing one week - dead &
dieing branches & fruit halos the next.
Leaves on effected branches have one sided leaf death, marginal
leaf fireing.
The smaller fruit on effected plants, show
white halos.
Hornworms & Stink Bugs are new arrivals in the tomato fields
over the last week.
Bacterial Spot has been a problem in both bannana
& jalapeno peppers for the last month.
We have hit it with almost every product you can think of &
can't seem to stop it.
I have a customer with 90 acres & it is in about 40 of those
acres.
We have been spraying every 4 - 5 days with bacterial compounds,
with little effect!
It is causing lots of leaf shedding & stunting of plant
growth, so far. No fruit damage observed yet.
We have also been finding both corn bore moths & egg masses in
early pepper fields.
I have seen some gummy stem in pickles & cantaloupes at
lighter levels.
Pumpkins, Squash & Gourds look good so far - clean.
We have not seen any Downy or Powdery Mildews in any curcurbits yet.
Field, Sweet & Popcorn fields about to silk or silking, have some very high populations
of both japanese
beetles & western corn rootworm beetles.
These populations are spotty, but Luther Gibbs has been busy
spraying lots of fields!
Growers / scouts need to do some checking on customers
fields.
Areas we have found threshold levels are corn back to corn &
fields on lighter soils.
I gave Sally Miller a flat of cabbage transplants that had lots of
something on their leaves.
These were right out of the greenhouse, it turns out it is Downy
Mildew!
She told me it will not cross over to curcurbit
crops, I hope so!
The neighborhood where they are being planted has lots of acres of
cucurbits close by!
The biggest concern at the moment is the drought!
It is starting to really hurt all crops in areas that haven't
caught a stray showers for 2 - 3 weeks!
The
Some growers are really getting tired & depressed from
watering & watching their crops wither!