A hit: Swipe with a wipe not enough to disinfect pruning tools
Sterilizing takes time but is not commonly needed
Hello Janet and Steven,
Just wanted you to know that something you answered in a
musing way during a pruning talk I attended, was right on. You'd
said you use bleach and water to sterilize your pruning saw or
clippers. Someone asked if they could just use antiseptic wipes on
their blade between cuts of a plant suspected of harboring disease.
I think the plants being discussed were a cherry with black knot
and euonymus with crown gall. You said, "Probably you could, but
not just a simple wipe. It's probably like at the blood bank, when
the nurse has to rub the skin with alcohol for x amount of
time."
I just ran across a Cornell University bulletin that prescribes a
minutes-long soak in 70% alcohol or 10% bleach. Doesn't seem like a
swipe with an antibacterial tissue can approach that!
plantclinic.cornell.edu/factsheets/treecankers.pdf
Thank you. That's great information.
Sterile tools can help prevent the spread of some viruses, and
diseases that spread within the water conducting system of wood,
but we don't think a gardener should become overly concerned about
that. It's probably more important to:
- Avoid wet weather when pruning plants that might be infected
with fungus or bacteria
- Remove infected plant parts as soon as you see them, cutting
well below any suspicious area.
- Make a habit of keeping blades free of sap.
As for cleanliness, it could be that our hands are more
to blame than our tools, for spreading disease, and in that regard
it also pays to prune only when it's dry and avoid handling
diseased wood.
More about this, from Cornell and Washington State Extensions
http://www.nysipm.cornell.edu/factsheets/treefruit/diseases/fb/fb.asp
http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~linda%20chalker-scott/FactSheets/Pruning.pdf