Gauteng Smallholder February 2016 | Page 40

IN THE GARDEN Now’s the time for garden diseases L ate summer is, particularly with this year's erratic rainfall and extreme heat, prime time for diseases in your vegetable garden. However, as experienced smallholders know, prevention is better than cure and you need to think holistically in managing your veggie patch. Diseases arise when there are three components present: a susceptible host plant, a pathogen capable of causing disease and an environment conducive to disease. Part of your holistic management involves your regular attention to the garden. Walk through the garden, particularly at this time of the year, to identify problems, so that swift counteractive measures can catch the problem before it has a chance to spread. An integrated approach also combines alternative control methods that help minimises the use of chemicals, thereby reducing health, environmental and economic risks. In terms of the plants, choose vegetables according to the season and location, as crops grown in an unfavourable season or incorrect location are more vulnerable to diseases. QUIRKY Try to ensure that your seed and seedlings are disease free when planting them. Use disease-resistant cultivars that are tolerant of existing soil or site conditions. Plant diseases are caused by fungi, bacteria and viruses, and most garden diseases are caused by fungi, which are parasitic plants that can attack all parts of the plant. Although very small, they can some- times be visible. Some fungi only attack one variety of plant, while others can attack a wide range of vegetables. Fungal spores are very tiny bodies what are easily distributed by wind, water, insects and other agencies such as clothes. Symptoms of fungal infection are the appearance of, for example, a powdery sub- cutting off the flow instantaneously. Thus your pump switches on only once, at the start of the filling cycle, switching off immediately the pressure in the system increases as the flow is cut off. The height of the cup mechanism can be adjusted up or down, so you can control how much water you'd like to use each flush, meaning you don't need to have bricks or water-filled bottles in your cistern to reduce the volume used. K In exactly the same way, the same saving in electricity will also happen if you fix dripping taps or leaky pipework in your plumbing, not to mention the water saving you will enjoy. ENERGY SAVING From page 36 “base” (ie, its roof) attached to a lever which switches off the flow of the water. As the water fills, it comes in at full pressure and soon reaches the lip of the outer cup, pouring into it. The inner cup, which is inverted and thus filled with air, thus starts rapidly to float and as it floats upwards its lever quickly seals the washer in the valve, 38 www.sasmallholder.co.za Continued on page 41