It's not only the financial markets and the food chain that are contaminated. Check this out:
Tomato plants have been removed from stores in half a dozen states as a destructive and infectious plant disease makes its earliest and most widespread appearance ever in the eastern United States.
Late blight — the same disease that caused the Irish Potato Famine in the 1840s — occurs sporadically in the Northeast, but this year's outbreak is more severe for two reasons: infected plants have been widely distributed by big-box retail stores and rainy weather has hastened the spores' airborne spread.
The disease, which is not harmful to humans, is extremely contagious and experts say it most likely spread on garden center shelves to plants not involved in the initial infection. It also can spread once plants reach their final destination, putting tomato and potato plants in both home gardens and commercial fields at risk.
Meg McGrath, professor of plant pathology at Cornell University, calls late blight "worse than the Bubonic Plague for plants."
"People need to realize this is probably one of the worst diseases we have in the vegetable world," she said. "It's certain death for a tomato plant."
Tomato plants have been removed from Home Depot, Wal-Mart, Lowe's and Kmart stores in all six New England states, plus New York. Late blight also has been identified in all other East Coast states except Georgia, as well as Alabama, West Virginia and Ohio, McGrath said.
Here's a suggestion:
1. Make sure you get a refund for your tomatoes if you got them from any of those stores.
2. If they won't give you a refund, put your tomatos in a plastic bag and mail them to the store's public offices, with a polite note asking what you should do about your destroyed garden.
And next time, buy local, or use heirlooms.
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Oh, the irony
I raised my own heirloom tomato seedlings, but because they were so small, bought two Home Despot tomato plants for "insurance". Oh, and one of them is an heirloom variety, so don't think that's any guarantee....
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If they're in NY state, I'm sure the spores will make their way
to adjoining states, through windblown spores, on cars and delivery vehicles, from purchases of other plants then taken across state lines. Watch out PA, NJ and points beyond.
This is very bad.
Oh, and the cheaper plants at the big box stores, along with the spiking and unpredictable energy costs, have put many small, independent nurseries out of business. Well, they used to be cheaper when there was more competition. Now there's just far less choice.