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Pleasant Talk About Fruits, Flowers and Farming

Chapter 164: MILDEW ON GRAPES.
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About This Book

A series of conversational essays and addresses mixes hands-on horticultural instruction with reflections on rural life, seasonal farm tasks, and domestic economy. Topics include fruit and flower cultivation, pruning, seed saving, plowing, manure theory, animal care, and crop management, alongside practical recipes, seed lists, and work calendars. The pieces pair technical tips with observations on beauty, health, and civic responsibility, encouraging readers to improve breeds and yields, beautify homesteads, and practice careful stewardship of land and gardens.

MILDEW ON GRAPES.

Many permit the fruit of the vines to perish before their eyes from the ravages of mildew, ignorant that an effectual remedy is within their reach. It is simply to dust the branches with flowers of sulphur. It is best done while the dew is on.

When vines are trained upon the sides of a house or fence, it is well to whitewash the surfaces on which they are fastened with a wash in which flowers of sulphur has been largely mixed.

It is recommended by some cultivators to employ such a whitewash for the wood of the vine, covering all the main stems with it; but all these methods result in the one thing—the application of sulphur as a remedy for mildew.