Xtremehorticulture

Black Spots on Octopus Agave Leaves

Q. Is there something we need to do for these spots on the leaves of my octopus agave? A. I think this is a fungal disease that favors a higher humidity than we normally have in the desert. The disease was caused and spread by the rain and wind that we had earlier. You don’t want any fungal disease spreading to the mainstem. To prevent that, you can apply a common landscape fungicide to the cactus after you have a repeat of the rain and wind event. Watch your weather app. If your weather app says the rain is returning, apply the landscape fungicide the day after it occurs. Broad-based landscape fungicides are meant to prevent the spread of many different types of disease. Fruit and vegetable growers use copper-based fungicides as a protectant for many different kinds of foliar diseases. To be used effectively, and like most fungicides, they must be applied before the presence of disease. Organic fungicides are the only organic option worthwhile against diseases such as late blight and downy mildew. Think tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, and potatoes. These diseases have the ability to kill plants. Copper is also an essential nutrient for plants but use it sparingly. Copper fungicides, like this one from Bonide, help prevent widespread infections of many more diseases when they are caught early enough. When used occasionally, copper is also an essential minor element for plants. In the meantime, prune out any black “spots” or lesions that you see in the stems. I think these are fungal lesions with dormant fungi waiting for the next rain event to make it active again. Sanitize between any cuts to eliminate re-infecting the plant. Use 70% ethyl alcohol to sanitize a knife or pruning shears. Using both the fungicide after wet weather and cutting out the black spots helps eliminate future problems. Make sure you’re not overwatering it and improve soil drainage around its roots. Octopus agave originates in the Sonoran Desert of Mexico therefore it doesn’t like getting watered too often. For instance, it will not survive in a lawn. Take it off the irrigation controller and hand water with a hose. Watering these plants once with a hose only gets the water 3 or 4 inches deep. Water these plants five times a year; only three or four times during the summer and once during the winter. The soil must be dry between waterings!

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Privet Yellowing a Soil Problem

Q. My Japanese privet was doing great. I gave it your EDDHA iron chelate elixir 6 months ago. I was watering three times a week and have now cut back to once a week. The leaves are now yellowing with brown spots, the same as it did last year. So, what should I do to the green back? Privet with leaf yellowing A. We see this yellowing of the leaves quite a bit in Ligustrum or privet. They prefer moist and enriched soils so I think this is a combination of both a lack of fertilizer and poor soil conditions. They are not a very good desert plant and don’t really like desert landscapes very much.  The yellowing is most likely a combination of high light intensity along with a general decline in health which makes them more reactive to these tough conditions.    Black spots developing on leaves weakened due to poor health. Perhaps anthracnose but should disappear if plant becomes healthy again. This may be too much for you but if you want to reinvigorate them I would go back in with some decent fertilizer such as Miracle Gro or Peters and either or both spray it on the foliage along with a teaspoon of Ivory liquid in each gallon of water. Then I would also follow up with some compost at the base of the plants and wood mulch to a depth of 4 inches or so.  You will probably not see much reaction this time of year since it is going into “hibernation” but should see a difference next spring. Keep the soil moist but the mulch will help to enrich the soil and keep the soil more moist than before.  Make sure it is getting adequate water. I would estimate about ten gallons per each application for that size of plant. That would be a minimum. You could do a bit more even like 15 gallons. They would like to be treated more like a rose bush than a cactus and would, in fact, like lawn watering schedules over tree and shrub watering. They do better in lawns is what I am saying. Don’t forget a fertilizer application along with your iron next February.

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