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CARRIAGE OF GLUB-ROOT

FARM BOOTS AS VEHICLE j The surest way of introducing club-root into a paddock is by inoculating the soil with it. Another j fairly sure way is by carrying the disease on one's boots from an injected paddock into a clean one. Neither practice is, to be recommended (dryly remarks a mulletin issued by Massey Agricultural College) . In. fact, adds the bulletin, farms: and even home gardeners should be careful not to carry disease on their footwear. It can be easily done, and, once the. infection has spread, no cruciferous crops can be safely grown on that land until the organism has had five years in. which to die of starvation. The spread of club-root on farms and in gardens can frequently be traced to the destructive organism? having had free rides on someone's boots. Liming helps to counteract this disease of swedes, turnips, rape and, to a lesser extent, choumoellier; and there are some good dis-ease-resistant varieties, but their yield is generally lower than, that of the more susceptible strains. The damage noticed on the foliage of club rooted crops is only a slight indication of the severe setback the plants have suffered below the surface of the ground. The only effective prevention of further trouble,—in addition to wiping -one's boots on leaving an infected paddock, as a poor substitute for putting them in a corrosive sublimate bath (the use of which is wholly impracticable in farming)— is to use a crop rotation which will spell the area from cruciferous crops, for live years.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BPB19440516.2.11

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 7, Issue 73, 16 May 1944, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
258

CARRIAGE OF GLUB-ROOT Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 7, Issue 73, 16 May 1944, Page 4

CARRIAGE OF GLUB-ROOT Bay of Plenty Beacon, Volume 7, Issue 73, 16 May 1944, Page 4

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