Cedar hawthorn rust treatment

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Hellanon

Hellanon

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Ok... First post so hello all.

I have a customer with about 50 affected trees. I conclude it is cedar hawthorn rust because it is on his pear trees, his apple trees, and his cedars.

This being my first time treating it, I don't know much.

I am looking for something that works others have used.
Most of the stuff I have looked at is very vauge in mixing instructions.
This customer is very important to me. Anyone else I would have said it's almost impossible to get rid of and told them to live with it, but this guy is someone I really gotta cure this for.

Most recommend two or more treatment which is fine. The thing is there are 50 of these trees at least. Its gonna take a butt ton of fungicide.

If anyone knows a good effective treatment mix and mix ratio to water, I would be grateful.

Again I would appreciate it from something you have personally used that was effective.

Thanks in advance!

One last thing...
I cant use anything unfriendly to bees which shouldn't be much of a factor to my limited knowledge.
 
Hellanon

Hellanon

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I am also buying this directly for him so Im not wanting to buy a bunch extra.
Trees average about 30' x50.
No idea how much I will need as I have never done this but that would be greatly appreciated info as well.
 

ATH

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I've treated a hawthorn at the back of my property a couple of times with left overs from the tank after treating apple scab...it worked pretty well. I tank mix Eagle amd Captan. Reliant works well too, but has a shorter residual.

Tourey should work well too, but you'll have a lot left over.

Plan to treat the Rosaceae host +/-3 times starting at bud break. I've never found something that indicates the Juniper host can be treated successfully...if so, it would take season long treatments.
 
Hellanon

Hellanon

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Is it likely to reoccur the next season in cedars and apples?

I do not want to talk this guy into anything that becomes an annual treatment.

I really very much appreciate that info and will look at all of them.

I've treated a hawthorn at the back of my property a couple of times with left overs from the tank after treating apple scab...it worked pretty well. I tank mix Eagle amd Captan. Reliant works well too, but has a shorter residual.

Tourey should work well too, but you'll have a lot left over.

Plan to treat the Rosaceae host +/-3 times starting at bud break. I've never found something that indicates the Juniper host can be treated successfully...if so, it would take season long treatments.
 
Hellanon

Hellanon

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I dont want to sound like an idiot but I keep finding errors in the labels of these mixing instructions.
Capture+_2020-02-24-21-39-11.png
^^^ Use 2 level... _____ ... What?
I am assuning they just left out tablespoons as thats what they used in the next instructions but how is anyone to know?

That is Captans label btw
 
Hellanon

Hellanon

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I have a much deeper question too...

I am treating the cedars for bagworms as well...
I am specifically using bacillus thuringensis.
Will the fungicide harm the microbe BT?
Treatments are required very close to one another.
 

ATH

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1) you will need annual treatments. You are protecting trees from infection, not curing them. Any other hosts within 1/4 - 1/2 mile will reinfect next year.
2) Not sure what is up with label. Call manufacturer to clarify. I agree it is likely TBS.
3) Shouldn't impact Bt - I don't think that is depending on an "active culture". It is a fermented bacteria.
 
Hellanon

Hellanon

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Joined
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Location
KC
1) you will need annual treatments. You are protecting trees from infection, not curing them. Any other hosts within 1/4 - 1/2 mile will reinfect next year.
2) Not sure what is up with label. Call manufacturer to clarify. I agree it is likely TBS.
3) Shouldn't impact Bt - I don't think that is depending on an "active culture". It is a fermented bacteria.
Thank you sir, much respect.
 

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