fungicide in fall. To control Peach Leaf Curl, treat Peach and Nectarine trees with a fungicide in the fall after leaves have dropped. In the past, the disease could be successfully treated with either lime-sulfur fungicide or a fixed copper fungicide with a copper compound containing at least 50 percent copper.
Peach leaf curl is not difficult to control. A single fungicide (copper or chlorothalonil) application made in the fall after leaves have dropped or in spring before bud swell will control the disease. The spring application must be made before bud swell.
What about pesticides? The safest, effective fungicides available for backyard trees are copper soap (copper octanoate) or copper ammonium, a fixed copper fungicide. Apply either of these copper products with 1% horticultural oil to increase effectiveness.
Apply Carbofuran 3G @ 4-5 Kg/acre in the mainfield to control sucking complex and insect vectors selectively. If it is not possible spray the crop with systemic insecticides. Dimethoate 2ml of Acephate 1g per litre of water. Collect and destroy infected virus plants as soon as they are noticed.
Leaf curl can usually be controlled satisfactorily by a spray of a suitable registered fungicide at any stage of dormancy. Most effective control is achieved by spraying when the buds are swelling but before they have opened. It's not possible to control the fungus once it's entered the leaf.
Plants often recover on their own from leaf curl caused by transplant shock within a couple of weeks.
Best Treatment for Leaf Curl
Where Leaf Curl has been severe in the previous year, trees can also be sprayed with Yates Liquid Copper Fungicide in autumn when the leaves drop, plus at the first sign of bud swell and again one week later.
Viro Raze is a powerful, versatile, and modern bio viricide that is highly effective against a broad range of plant viruses, including Chilli Leaf Curl Virus, Tomato Leaf Curl Virus, Papaya Ring Spot Virus, Yellow Vein Mosaic Virus Of Okra, Little Leaf Of Brinjal, and other viruses commonly found in crops.
Leaf curl starts appearing in early spring on stone fruit trees. Spray a mixture of apple cider vinegar and water in winter and early spring when buds appear, then every couple of weeks. This will help with brown rot, black spot and leaf curl, to name a few.
Spraying in winter and again in early spring is your best bet of keeping the fungus at bay. Organic approved sprays such as Neem Oil, Horticultural Oil, Bi-Carb and Copper all work but we've found Copper to be by far the most effective against leaf curl.
Over-watering.
Overdoing your watering can have a similar effect to underwatering. You may also find your plants produce an excess of foliage but few tomatoes. Leaves might yellow and wither, or they could curl.
Leaf Curl, prevention is the only way to deal with it that I know of. I start spraying my trees with Neem oil / Bonide Copper Fungicide mixture when dormant 3 times last spray when the buds start swelling but are still gray colored. Blossom Blight is a problem too, this spray takes care of that too.
Fungicide hints …
Spray your trees twice, the first time in late November and the second time in early February. A handy trick for remembering those dates is to spray right after Thanksgiving and just before Valentine's Day. Spray trees until they are dripping.
Prevent Leaf Curling
Another sign of magnesium deficiency, this problem can also be tackled with the help of Epsom Salt. Mix two table spoons in a gallon of water and spray your curled foliage with the solution until the leaves look perfect again.
Controlling the Spread of Peach Leaf Curl
Manually removing the infected leaves from the tree can help control the spread of Peach Leaf Curl. The discarded leaves contain fungus spores that can overwinter in the soil beneath the tree and reactivate in the spring.
The safest, effective fungicides available for backyard peach trees are copper soap (copper octanoate) or copper ammonium and are known as fixed copper fungicides. Apply either of these copper products with 1% horticultural oil to increase their fungicidal effectiveness.
To make a natural fungicide out of this, take one tablespoon of vinegar and mix it with a gallon of water. Shake it well and add to a spray bottle. A vinegar mixture can treat most fungal infections on any plant without causing any harm.
Leaf curl disease shows up in spring, does the damage, and then disappears (until next spring). If your trees were infected last spring, they should have completely recovered by mid to late summer. They usually grow lots of healthy new leaves (like the photo below).
Spray at bud-swell with copper hydroxide or copper oxychloride and ensure thorough coverage over all branches. Timing is critical to prevent the fungus entering the plant when new leaves are vulnerable.
Most often the disease will not show up on the developing fruit, but occasionally it does affect fruit, causing corky areas to develop on the fruit surface. Those fruits are still okay to eat—just cut away the affected area.
Pour 2 cups of vegetable oil and ½ cup of dishwashing liquid into a jar, mix it well then add 1 tbsp of concentrate to 1 litre of water. Spray to cover the top and bottom of the foliage.