Powdery Mildew Treatment For Vegetable Plants UK
For powdery mildew on UK vegetable plants, remove badly affected leaves, improve airflow, water at soil level, avoid overfeeding with nitrogen and use suitable organic controls only where appropriate. It is difficult to reverse badly infected growth, so focus on slowing spread and improving conditions around cucumbers, courgettes, squash, peas and other vulnerable crops.
Powdery Mildew Visual Guide
This related SoilCommander squash video is useful because courgettes and squash are often affected by powdery mildew later in the season. Watch it with the prevention notes below: spacing, airflow and watering habits matter before leaves show symptoms.
Watch the squash growing video on YouTube.
What Powdery Mildew Looks Like
Powdery mildew usually appears as white, grey or dusty powder on the upper surface of leaves. It can start as small pale patches, then spread across older leaves. On vegetables, affected leaves may yellow, curl, dry at the edges or stop working well even if the plant keeps producing for a while.
Why Vegetable Plants Get Powdery Mildew
Vegetable plants are more likely to get powdery mildew when airflow is poor, roots dry out, plants are crowded, nights are cooler and leaves are stressed. In UK gardens it often appears later in summer when courgettes, squash, cucumbers and peas are large, tired or packed closely together.
Powdery Mildew Treatment Steps
- Remove the worst affected leaves and put them in garden waste rather than leaving them around the plant.
- Thin crowded growth so air can move between stems and leaves.
- Water at soil level and keep roots evenly moist in dry weather.
- Avoid high-nitrogen feeding when plants are already soft, stressed or crowded.
- Use suitable organic controls only according to the product label and avoid spraying in strong sun.
- Record which crops were affected so spacing and watering can be improved next season.
Treatment By Crop
| Crop | What to do |
|---|---|
| Cucumbers | Remove badly affected lower leaves, keep roots evenly moist and improve greenhouse or polytunnel ventilation. |
| Courgettes and squash | Remove the worst old leaves, keep picking fruit, water deeply at the base and leave space between plants. |
| Peas | Keep plants watered during dry spells, avoid dense sowing and clear finished pea plants promptly. |
Homemade And Organic Treatment Options
Some gardeners use homemade sprays, but results vary and strong mixes can damage leaves. If you use an organic or homemade powdery mildew treatment, test a small area first, avoid hot sun and do not expect badly infected leaves to recover. The most reliable non-chemical steps are removing the worst leaves, improving airflow and reducing plant stress.
How To Prevent Powdery Mildew
- Space plants properly so air can move between leaves.
- Water consistently at soil level.
- Choose open, sunny positions where possible.
- Avoid overfeeding with nitrogen.
- Clear exhausted crops and badly affected leaves.
- Grow susceptible crops in a different bed after repeat problems.
Related UK Growing Guides
- UK garden problems
- Vegetable planting calendar UK
- UK Vegetable Garden Planner PDF
- Watering equipment for gardening
- Soil and plant care
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best powdery mildew treatment for vegetable plants?
The best first treatment is to remove badly affected leaves, improve airflow, water at soil level and reduce plant stress. Organic sprays may help slow spread, but they should be used carefully and will not make badly infected leaves normal again.
Can powdery mildew spread to other vegetables?
Yes, it can spread where conditions suit it, especially on susceptible crops such as cucumbers, courgettes, squash and peas. Good spacing, airflow and cleanup reduce the risk.
Should I remove leaves with powdery mildew?
Remove the worst affected leaves, especially older leaves that are yellowing, crowded or touching other plants. Avoid stripping all foliage at once if the plant still needs leaves to support fruit.
Can courgettes keep cropping with powdery mildew?
Sometimes. A few older marked leaves are common late in the season. Remove the worst leaves, water deeply at the base and keep picking fruit, but badly stressed plants may slow down.
Does watering cause powdery mildew?
Inconsistent watering and dry roots can stress plants and make powdery mildew worse. Water at soil level rather than wetting leaves late in the day.
Fix The Cause, Then Plan The Next Crop
Troubleshooting works best when you improve the growing conditions and record what changed for the next season.
Plan the next step
Use the printable UK Vegetable Garden Planner to turn this guide into sowing dates, bed layouts, and weekly garden tasks.
