By joenesgarden, 1 year and 1 month ago

Late blight marches on

August 11, 2009.  Late blight continues to rear its ugly head in Connecticut farms and gardens, according to a recent report in the Norwich Bulletin.  Because of the high risk of this windborne fungus spreading from location to location, I check my tomato plants daily. The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station's Department of Plant Pathology and Ecology posted images of CT grown tomatoes with late blight.  For images of all types of tomato disease, visit Cornell University's Vegetable MD Online.

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