East Michigan vegetable regional report – August 31, 2016
Harvest is slowing down for some crops and starting for others.
Crops
Storage onions in Imlay City, Michigan, are starting to move. Digging started two weeks ago, and harvest has been ongoing.
Cauliflower is in various stages of tying and harvest. Quality has been best where wrapper leaves are free of tip burn. The latest plantings are 10 inches tall.
Cabbages are being cut and boxed across the region. Quality has been good. Swede midge catch spiked on some traps over the last two weeks, but I have not seen much damage. Earlier in the year, trap catches were low, but damage was easy to spot.
Peppers in areas of heavy rainfall have been succumbing to various fruit rots. Eggplants and peppers in east Michigan have been diagnosed with broad mites that caused twisted leaves and fruit scarring.
Tomatoes are starting to die-off, and last pickings have had more soft rots and anthracnose after the rains.
Fresh market potatoes are harvestable in many regions, and they continue to be dug on demand.
Powdery mildew pressure in hard squash and pumpkin has increased. Lots of acorn, turban, buttercup, spaghetti, butternut and delicata squash are on market tables.
Melon and watermelon harvest continues. Sprite melons are an interesting variety I see sold around Lapeer, Michigan.
Pickling cucumbers are scheduled to finish up harvest by Sept. 16, but most will be finishing about a week before then.
Special events
- Sept. 8, In-row Cultivation Workshop. MSU Extension specialist Dan Brainard is hosting an in-row cultivation workshop in Milan, Michigan, at Zilke Farms. Contact Dan at brainar9@msu.edu or Vicki Morrone at sorrone@msu.edu for details.
- Dec. 6-8, Great Lakes EXPO. Reserve your hotel early for the Great Lakes EXPO in Grand Rapids, Michigan! Registration is not open yet, but hotels often fill up before then. Anyone can access educational session summaries from the Great Lakes EXPO at the website. View the session summaries.
Please contact me at phill406@msu.edu or 616-901-7513 to grab any suspected disease samples from your farm, or send the diseased plant parts to MSU Diagnostic Services.