posted 7 years ago
Mold spores are often laying there on the ground, just waiting to be splashed up onto the underside of leaves when water is carelessly sprayed around the garden. One way to minimize this is to put a clean layer of mildew-spore-free mulch down around the growing plants. A bale of fresh wheat/oat straw is perfect for this, but I've also used wood chips (both fresh and aged). If I've got a bale of straw (I scavenge them after Halloween parties and Thanksgiving displays at stores), I put down a fresh layer of straw mulch about every 6 weeks throughout the growing season. It tends to disappear quickly as decomposition is pretty rapid in my bacterial and fungal dominated soil.
When you water, carefully try to keep splash-back to a minimum. Just turn down the pressure so its not blasting everywhere.
Over the years, I'm finding less and less powdery mildew on my plants --- I think that the soil itself has gotten healthier or that there is some other agent at work in the healthy soil that makes the mildew less robust. Perhaps its a different fungi that has pushed out the powdery mildew fungi. It's not anything specific that I did to counteract the powdery mildew, other than just continually improving my soil through mulch (mostly wood chips), cover cropping, and multi-species planting. This past summer was the best I've ever had -- not hardly any P.M. at all.
"The rule of no realm is mine. But all worthy things that are in peril as the world now stands, these are my care. And for my part, I shall not wholly fail in my task if anything that passes through this night can still grow fairer or bear fruit and flower again in days to come. For I too am a steward. Did you not know?" Gandolf