Product Label
Vegetable Diseases - continued
Crop(s) Disease(s)
Area to Cover
PHI
Comments
Onion (Dry Bulb),
Garlic
Botrytis Leaf Blight (Blast),
Purple Blotch, Downy
Mildew (suppression)
37.5 sq. ft. 7 Apply at first sign of disease.
Potato Early Blight, Late Blight,
Botrytis Vine Rot
75 sq. ft. 0
Begin when plants are 6 inches
high or when disease threatens
and continue as needed to
maintain disease control.
Tomato
Early Blight, Late Blight, Gray
Leaf Spot, Gray Leaf Mold,
Septoria Leaf Spot,
Anthracnose, Alternaria Fruit
Rot (Black Mold), Rhizoctonia
Fruit Rot, Botrytis Gray Mold
37.5 sq. ft. 0 Begin when conditions favor
disease development.
Fruit Diseases
Apply a full coverage spray to the point of runoff to thoroughly cover tree canopy including
undersides of leaves.
Crop(s)
Apricot,
Nectarine,
Peach
Apricot,
Peach,
Nectarine,
Cherry
Disease(s)
Peach Leaf Curl,
Coryneum Blight
(Shothole)
Brown Rot
Blossom Blight
Scab
Cherry Leaf Spot
Cherry Leaf Spot
(post harvest)
Comments
Make one application at leaf fall in late autumn. Make 1 or 2
applications in mid- to late-winter before buds begin to swell. Where
Coryneum Blight (Shothole) occurs, apply an additional application 1
to 2 weeks after petal fall or at shucksplit (tiny fruit just beginning to
form) to prevent fruit infections.
Make 1 application at popcorn (pink, red or early white bud stage
when first color shows) and a second application at full bloom. If cool,
moist weather continues, make an additional application at petal fall.
Make 1 application at popcorn and a second application at full
bloom. In addition, make one application at shucksplit. Do not
apply after shucksplit or before harvest.
Make 1 application at popcorn and a second application at
full bloom. In addition, make one application at shucksplit.
Make 1 application to foliage within 7 days after fruit is
removed. In trees with a history of high leaf spot incidence,
make a second application 10 to 14 days later.
Ornamental Diseases
Spray foliage to the point of runoff. Begin applications as directed for
each species and disease condition cited and repeat on a 7 to 14 day
schedule until conditions are no longer favorable for disease development.
For outdoor use only.
First ApplicationSpecies Diseases Controlled
Broadleaf Shrubs and Trees
Ash (Fraxinus) Cercospora, Cercosporidium,
Cylindrosporium Leaf Spots
Spring bud break
Azalea*, Rhododendron* Phytophthora Die-back,
Ovulinia Flower Blight
New leaf emergence,
early bloom
Buckeye, Horsechestnut Leaf Blotch, Anthracnose Spring bud break
Cherry-Laurel Cercospora Leafspot Petal fall
Crabapple Scab, Cedar-Apple Rust,
Sphaeropsis Leaf Spot
Spring bud break
Dogwood Anthracnose (Discula sp.),
Septoria Leaf Spot
Spring bud swell,
early bloom
Euonymus Anthracnose Spring bud break
Firethorn (Pyracantha) Scab Spring bud break
Flowering Almond, Quince
and Cherry Hawthorn
Monilinia Blossom/Branch
Blight Rust, Fabraea Leaf Spot
Early bloom, pre-bloom
Holly Rhizoctonia Web Blight Warm, moist conditions
Mountain Laurel Cercospora Leaf Spot Spring bud break
Oak (red group only) Taphrina Blister, Actinopelte
Leaf Spot, Anthracnose
Dormant bud swell
Oregon-Grape (Mahonia) Rust Spring bud break
Photinia Fabraea (Entomosporium) Leaf Spot Spring bud break
Pieris (Andromeda) Phytophthora Die-Back New leaf emergence
Poplar Marssonina Leaf Spot Spring bud break
Privet Cercospora Leaf Spot Prolonged wet conditions
Sycamore, Planetree Anthracnose Spring bud break
Viburnum Powdery Mildew Mid-summer
Bulbs and Flowering Plants
Carnation Alternaria Leaf
Spot/Branch Rot, Botrytis
Transplant of cuttings;
cool, moist conditions
Chrysanthemum/Daisy Mycosphaerella Ray Blight,
Septoria Leaf Spot
Transplant of cuttings
*Discoloration of bloom has been noted on certain varieties when applications are made during flowering.