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Turnip, Rutabaga, Kohlrabi Growing Problems: Troubleshooting
Filed under: Pests Diseases Problems, Tagged as: kohlrabi, pests and diseases, pests diseases problems, rutabaga, turnip
Grow turnip, rutabaga, and kohlrabi in cool-weather. Get these vegetables started early in spring at least two months before the onset of very warm weather, or plant them in late summer so that they come to harvest in the cool days of autumn.
Grow turnips, rutabagas, and kohlrabi rapidly--these crops are most flavorful if they don't linger in the garden. Thin these crops early to 2½ inches apart or more; they will suffer if crowded.
For turnip growing tips see How to Grow Turnips or Turnip Growing Success Tips at the bottom of this post.
Here are common turnip growing problems with cures and controls:
Seeds rot or seedlings collapse with dark water-soaked stems as soon as they appear. Damping off is a fungus that lives in the soil, particularly where humidity is high. Do not plant in cold, moist soil. Make sure soil is well drained.
Young plants are eaten or cut off near soil level. Cutworms are gray grubs ½- to ¾-inch long that can be found curled under the soil. They chew stems, roots, and leaves. Place a 3-inch paper collar around the stem of the plant. Keep the garden free of weeds; sprinkle wood ash around base of plants.
Seedlings fail to emerge from soil; seedlings are eaten; root surfaces tunneled or scared; plants wilt. Cabbage maggot is a small gray-white, legless worm to ⅓-inch long; adult looks like a housefly. Flies lay eggs in the soil near the seedling or plant. Apply lime or wood ashes around the base of plants; time planting to avoid insect growth cycle. Plant a bit later when the weather is drier.
Leaves curl under and become curled, deformed, and yellowish. Aphids are tiny, oval, and yellowish to greenish pear-shaped insects that colonize on the undersides of leaves. They leave behind sticky excrement called honeydew which can turn into a black sooty mold. Use insecticidal soap. Cucumber, Squash
Leaves blotched white and yellow and deformed; leaves and plant wilts. Harlequin bug or stink bug. (1) Harlequin bug is shield-shaped usually black withy bright red, yellow, or orange markings. Injury is caused by bugs sucking fluids from tissues. Hand-pick and destroy bugs and egg masses. Keep garden clean of crop debris where bugs breed. (2) Stink bugs are gray or green shield-shaped bugs about ¼-inch long. Remove garden debris and weeds where bugs can overwinter. Hand-pick egg masses and bugs and destroy.
Leaves yellow between veins; leaf margins brown and curl upward; stem base becomes dark brown, black, slimy, and rots. Blackleg is a fungal disease. Add organic matter to planting bed; make sure soil is well-drained. Remove infected plants and destroy infected roots. Rotate crops.
Yellow spot on leaves become water-soaked; spots become circular with gray centers. Leaf spot or Septoria leaf spot is a fungus disease. Plant resistant varieties. Rotate crops. Keep garden free of plant debris. Apply copper dust or liquid copper spray every 7 to 10 days.
Yellow spots on outer leaves enlarge to become gray-brown streaks. Early blight or Cercospora leaf spot is a fungal disease spread by heavy rainfall and warm temperatures. Keep weeds down in the garden area; they harbor fungal spores. Avoid overhead watering.
Pale yellow gray brown, dark green spots on leaves; fungal leaf spot
Irregular yellowish to brownish spots on upper leaf surfaces; grayish powder or mold on undersides. Downy mildew is caused by a fungus. Improve air circulation. Plant resistant varieties. Rotate crops. Keep garden free of plant debris.
Leaves yellow and curl; stalks become twisted, brittle; plants yellow and are stunted. Aster yellows is a mycoplasma disease spread by leafhoppers. Remove infected plants. Control leafhopper. Keep the garden free of weeds which can harbor disease.
Leaves yellow, wilt; plant stunted; root gnarled and swollen. Clubroot is a fungal disease that leaves roots unable to take up water. Remove and destroy infected plants. Solarize soil. Make soil pH less acidic; add lime.
Tiny shot-holes in leaves of seedlings. Flea beetles are tiny bronze or black beetles a sixteenth of an inch long. They eat small holes in the leaves of seedlings and small transplants. The larvae feed on roots of germinating plants. Spread diatomaceous earth around seedling. Cultivate often to disrupt life cycle. Keep garden clean.
Leaves are eaten and plants are partially defoliated. Blister beetles are slender bodied, gray, black, or metallic to ¾-inch long. Handpick beetles and destroy. Keep the garden weeds and debris. Cultivate in spring to kill larvae and interrupt the life cycle. Spray or dust with Sevin or use a pyrethrum or rotenone spray.
Holes eaten in leaves, buds, or roots; some seedlings may be cut off at soil level. Vegetable weevils or
Irregular small holes eaten in leaves; seedlings may be eaten. Cabbage looper or armyworms. (1) Cabbage looper is a light green caterpillar with yellow stripes running down the back; loops as it walks. Keep garden clean of debris where adult brownish night-flying moth can lay eggs. Cover plants with spun polyester to exclude moths. Pick loppers off by hand. Use Bacillus thuringiensis. Dust with Sevin or rotenone. (2) Armyworms are dark green caterpillars the larvae of a mottled gray moth with a wingspan of 1½ inches. Armyworms mass and eat leaves, stems, and roots of many crops. Handpick caterpillars and destroy. Cultivate after harvest to expose the pupae. Use commercial traps with floral lures.
Turnip, Rutabaga, and Kohlrabi Growing Success Tips:
Planting. Grow turnips, rutabagas, and kohlrabi in full sun. For summer sown turnips, make sure the seedbed and seedlings are in afternoon shade. These crops grow best in loose, well-drained soil rich in organic matter. Add aged compost to the planting bed before seeding and work it into the bed to a depth of about 6 inches.
Planting time. Sow turnips, rutabaga, and kohlrabi in the garden as early as 4 weeks before the last average frost date in spring. Sow succession crops every 2 to 3 weeks throughout the growing season. In hot summer regions, stop planting in early summer and then sow the fall crop in midsummer, about 8 to 10 weeks before the average date of the first frost in fall. In mild-winter regions, sow these crops every 2 to 3 weeks through the winter.
Care. Keep root crops evenly moist. Mulch turnips, rutabaga, and kohlrabi with aged compost to conserve soil moisture and keep the soil cool.
Harvest. Begin lifting turnips, rutabaga, and kohlrabi on about the date of maturity; mark your calendar at planting time. Check these crops on a regular basis and lift them as soon as they are ready to use. Salad turnips are ready when they are about 2 inches in diameter; storage turnips can stay in the ground longer as long as the soil remains cool. It is best to harvest spring planted turnips young. Lift spring turnips as soon as the daytime temperatures average 80°F. Turnips for fall harvest can remain in the soil once temperatures begin to cool; cool temperatures will improve the flavor of fall harvest turnips. Follow the same guidelines to harvest rutabagas and kohlrabi.
Grow 80 vegetables: THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE
Related Articles:
Vegetable Disease Problem Solver
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