Mrs. Weedstein
Well-Known Member
I brought this up in another thread but decided it might be worth having as a standalone topic.
During the Oregon wildfires last month, my plants got covered in ash despite being in a hoophouse.
Folks advised me to wash it off but I was reluctant to do so, due to fear of bud rot from getting the plants wet. They were already flowering pretty heavily.
Now we had a few days of rain and I’ve got bud rot out the wazoo, even though my plants are covered.
Is it likely that the ash got stuck in the buds as they grew and then absorbed moisture, adding to the problem?
I am at a loss why else the bus rot problem would be so severe. It was less severe last year even though my crop was directly rained upon before I built the hoophouse.
The varieties were similar in that they were the parents of this year’s cultivars. I wouldn’t expect the progeny to be more susceptible than the parents.
During the Oregon wildfires last month, my plants got covered in ash despite being in a hoophouse.
Folks advised me to wash it off but I was reluctant to do so, due to fear of bud rot from getting the plants wet. They were already flowering pretty heavily.
Now we had a few days of rain and I’ve got bud rot out the wazoo, even though my plants are covered.
Is it likely that the ash got stuck in the buds as they grew and then absorbed moisture, adding to the problem?
I am at a loss why else the bus rot problem would be so severe. It was less severe last year even though my crop was directly rained upon before I built the hoophouse.
The varieties were similar in that they were the parents of this year’s cultivars. I wouldn’t expect the progeny to be more susceptible than the parents.