I have 2 small peach trees and 1 small orange tree. Do I need to spray them all with lime sulphur for leaf curl and anti rot. When should I spray them. Thanks
Fruit trees
Hi @Charley1,
First, let me extend a warm welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community! It is wonderful you have joined and thank you for asking about keeping your peach and orange trees healthy. Our resident DIY expert @EricL will be online later this afternoon to assist, but let me also tag our garden members @Noelle, @LisasGarden, and @mich1972 to check what they would suggest.
Katie
Morning @Charley1 Great question. With your Peach trees and any other deciduous fruit trees like apples, plums, pears ect. It is best to spray a fungicide on them at the end of winter, start of spring as soon as you see the “bud burst” the leaves just starting to form. If you wait once the leaves are fully open or any other time, it’s too late. Lime Sulphur is excellent to spray in the winter months and will help protect against fungal infections. Copper Oxychloride ( leaf curl spray ) from Yates is another good fungicide.
With your Citrus, if you can see any insect damage then you will need to spray as needed. Depending on what the problem is.
I hope this is helpful . Good luck. Your plants are looking ok from what I can see. when you get time, could you possibly send a couple of photos that are taken in the day light and a bit closer. Thank you 😊
@Noelle i know will definitely give you great advice 😊
Hi @Charley1
@mich1972 has given you great advice for keeping fungal diseases under control on your deciduous peach trees. The timing of sprays is really important. In addition to the recommended spray at bud burst, I would add in a spray in autumn immediately after the leaves have fallen, to try to eradicate any fungal spores that may be present on twigs/branches as they can over-winter in bud scales and rough bark. Make sure you collect all fallen leaves and dispose of them in the rubbish bin, in case they have spores on them too.
The citrus tree should pretty much be left alone unless you spot obvious problems such as leaf miners, scale or sooty mould, in which case a spray with a horticultural oil and insecticide would be appropriate.
Thanks heaps. Do I need to spray with Yates anti rot as well as lime sulphur ? Or does lime sulphur do the trick.
Thank you @Noelle 😊 🥰
Do I have to spray anti rot to my trees as well as lime sulphur ?
I have attached photos of my 3 trees. I intend to put them all into the ground during winter.
2 peach trees and 1 orange tree. They are not dwarf, but I intend to keep them small, about 5 feet high. Thanks.PeachOrange
Hello @Charley1
Just to make sure that there is no confusion with the terms, anti-rot is fungicide spray. The term bud burst is the process of buds (very young leaves in small bud form) emerging from their winter dormancy, ready to bloom for the new season.
My only other recommendation if you are planning to transplant the peach and orange trees is to test the pH level of the soil with a Soil pH test kit.
Here are some handy guides to help you before transplanting:
If you need further assistance, please let us know.
Eric
Do I need to add a wetting agent to Yates success ultra when spraying my peach and orange trees for insects. If so, what should I use. Can I use a mixture of household detergent and sunflower oil for incests as well.
@Charley1 When spraying an insecticide, fungicide or weed killer, it’s ok to add a few drops of dish washing liquid to act as a wetting agent to help it stick to the foliage. Castile Liquid Soap is usually the best one to use 😊 if you can’t get it dishwashing liquid is fine.
@Charley1 Using both fungicides might be a bit too much. lime Sulpher is more for the deciduous fruit trees and also good for mites. The Anti Rot is more of a systemic fungicide for Collar Rot ect.
@Noelle Just confirming with you Noelle, two different fungicides for different fungal diseases. They are also good as a preventative spray, just not together as it may be too much ? 😊
Hi @mich1972 & @Charley1
Definitely NOT both together. Anti rot usually isn't necessary unless there is fungal rotting of the wood of the tree, as would occur with collar rot. A good general garden fungicide (lime sulphur, copper spray, etc) would be just fine to control the normal range of fungal diseases deciduous fruit trees like peaches could experience.
Adding a wetting agent depends on the insect attacking your plant. If you look at the instructions at the back of the bottle, you'll see an asterisk symbol next to the insect's name. For example, the apple moth has a single asterisk next to its name which means that you'll need to add a wetting agent when spraying it on your plant.
The others that have two asterisks on it means that you'll need to use white oil. White oil is an agricultural oil and is meant to be used for gardening only.
Noelle you are the BEST 🌿🌿💚💚🥰