wilting broccoli

Discussion in 'Edible Gardening' started by newpotato, Jul 24, 2009.

  1. newpotato

    newpotato Apprentice Gardener

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    Just yesterday my broccoli were looking healthy, upright and vibrant, but today the leaves have all drooped and gone a pale grey green! What happened? what have i done wrong, it was doing so well, there's no sign of the florets yet but the leaves looked in perfect condition until today. Anyone got any ideas or advice on how I can save it :help:
     
  2. Dave W

    Dave W Total Gardener

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    Most likely a problem at root level. Could be cabbage root fly or possibly club root. You should be able to check if it's either of these by scraping a bit of soil away from the roots. There are now no chemical cures available (as far as I know) for either club root or root fly - prevention is the only route to take and if you've got one or the other it's too late now. The only thing you might try is foliar feeding, but I doubt if it will help much.
     
  3. clueless1

    clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

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    I believe club root risk can be reduced by altering the soil pH to slightly the acid, but that's from something I read, not from experience.
     
  4. Dave W

    Dave W Total Gardener

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  5. clueless1

    clueless1 member... yep, that's what I am:)

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    Thanks for that. From that it seems we should take the pH to the alkaline side rather than acid as I previously thought, as indicated by the addition of lots of lime. Although 1lb of lime to a gallon of water sounds like a lot to me, that would potentially make a fairly caustic solution, but then I guess it depends how much of this solution was used and over how big an area.
     
  6. Flinty

    Flinty Gardener

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    New potato

    Welcome to the forum.

    The sudden collapse of brassica plants strongly suggests cabbage root fly to me.

    I have a painful memory of a line of perfect young Greyhound cabbage plants suddenly flopping in the first hot week of summer some years ago. I lifted a couple and found the roots were a squirming mass of cabbage root fly grubs. Try lifting a couple and see if you find the same. Like Dave W says, there's no cure, I'm afraid.
     
  7. Manteur

    Manteur Gardener

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    I agree. The word sudden says it all. Clubroot is similar, but not sudden.
     
  8. newpotato

    newpotato Apprentice Gardener

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    thanks for your replies guys, i'm very new to this gardening stuff and just trying to fumble my way through and it looks like i've got a lot to learn about soil ph and pests, so thanks again for your advice but on the upside my broccoli seems to have made a miraculos recovery and i haven't really done anything except move the pot, so i'm thinking it was perhaps just not catching as much rain as the over pots and became dehydrated, who knows but i will be keeping an eye on it :)
     
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