HAWAI'I'S GARDENS
Protect your garden in disease-susceptible Hawaii
By Jayme Grzebik
Special to The Advertiser
Hawai'i's consistent year-round temperatures make most people think that we are a jackpot for growing vegetables and fruits. However, with the exception of some of our higher-elevation residents on Maui or the Big Island, we live without a winter chill to keep unwanted diseases in check. The absence of a true winter creates for a very habitable environment for diseases, which can settle into gardens throughout Hawai'i's growing season. Therefore, it is important to understand practices that can prevent diseases.
Diseases are specific to individual crops. For example, pole beans are associated with powdery mildew, a white fungus that settles on wet leaves. Being aware of this fact means preventive measures can be followed. To find out which diseases are associated with specific vegetables, click on Home Garden Vegetable at www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/FreePubs.
Next Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon, the Urban Garden Center in Pearl City celebrates another Second Saturday at the Garden program featuring UH vegetable seeds, with special presentations by Desmond Ogata of the UH Seed Lab at 9:30 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
In addition, the Banana Tissue Culture Program of UH will have three banana cultivars available: Ice Cream, Lady Finger (also known as True Apple/Amorosa/Manzano), and Williams. Plants are tested to make sure they are free of banana bunchy top virus, micropropagated in tissue culture media, and established in 3-by-5-inch plastic bags with soilless media. Plants will be sold at $7 per plant (potted with roots well established). Free education materials on some banana pests and different varieties of banana will also be distributed, organized by Dr. Koon-Hui Wang and Eden Perez. Visit www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/ougc for directions or call 453-6055 or 453-6050.