I'm afraid I may have a Niagara Falls that is infected with HVX. After I dig out and destroy the plant, how long must I wait before I can replant in the same spot? Is there some way to clean the soil so it can be replanted sooner?
Thanks.
When can location in garden be replanted?
- newtohosta-no more
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infected roots die?
I remember reading a thread where the consensus seemed to be that the best way to dispose of an infected plant was to leave it in the sun until and beyond being dried up. How does that equate with simply waiting a year in a garden spot?
Dennis
Dennis
- Pieter
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That indeed applies to the plant and it's just making sure the plant has died and there is no more living tissue -either from the Hosta itself or from whatever virus may have been present, before it is finally disposed of. But that has nothing to do with the hole it was planted in.the best way to dispose of an infected plant was to leave it in the sun until and beyond being dried up
The HVX virus lives in the plant's sap. Whenever you dig up a Hosta there will be some roots left behind in the soil and those of course will be cut and have open surfaces from which the sap can flow. For as long as those roots are still there, the virus will still be in those roots. In the roots, not in the soil. The HVX virus cannot survive in the soil, it is carried only in the plant sap. As long as there are roots with sap that still carry the virus you are taking a chance of those injured/cut roots coming into contact with the roots of whatever new Hosta you're placing there and you will take a chance on infecting the new plant. Once the roots are dead, the virus they carried at one time is now dead as well.
Odds are you'll be safe in about 10-12 weeks after removal because it is highly unlikely for broken off roots to have survived for that long. But if you really don't wish to take a chance, take the soil through the season into the next to make sure winter will have killed off whatever residual roots there may have been left. If you just cannot wait, you might want to plant the new Hosta into a suitably sized gardener's pot and the pop it out of the pot next year.....
No sap---No Virus!
Thanks Pieter for your explanation. Do I understand correctly that the roots cannot survive ( no photosynthesis, no transpiration) without the upper plant parts and that given enough time they will dehydrate even though the surrounding hosta bed is constantly moist?
Dennis
Dennis