White Fibrous Stuff on Lilac Bush

Or at least I think it’s a lilac bush. It was kind of starting to look pretty beat up. Here’s a wide:

http://i456.photobucket.com/albums/qq286/vacilandotv/lilacwide.jpg

And the landscaper trimmed it down a bit. I just noticed some white stuff on the branches. The leaves are kinda dull and soapy looking too, but the branches caught my eye:

When I got close to it, it almost looked like fly eggs that were kind of dried up. Upon closer examination, the substance almost looks fibrous:

Yeah…that can’t be good…

Any ideas?

Hard to tell, but I’d guess a type of scale.

Note that the picture is only one variety of scale. It can be white and hard like in your picture. Treatment is effective with a horticultural oil.

The stuff on the close up of the branches does indeed look it could be some type of scale, but the whitening on the leaves looks like powdery mildew to me.

What’s “powdery mildew” do? I’ve got it all over my yard. Will it hurt the plants?

Could be wooly aphids

The stuff on the leaves is powdery mildew. It can retard the growth of the bush, but it won’t kill the bush, & besides, it’s late enough in the year you probably need not worry about it. I’ve been ignoring the mildew on my lilac all summer, & I’ve pretty much quit removing mildewed leaves from my apple seedlings as of September.

Earlier this year, I was pulling mildewed leaves off the little trees to stop its spread, as I’m to cheap to go get the specific fungicide that kills it. Now, I’m like, eh, diminishing returns for that plan, let winter kill most of it off. (But my trees are in pots & can be quarantined, so that’s easy for me to say.)

I don’t know what the crud on the branches is.

PM won’t kill an established shrub, but a serious case can ruin annuals and seriously stunt the growth of perennials, even if it doesn’t kill them.

It is my understanding that a prolonged period of high humidity paired with dry soil (due to lack of rain, or insuffcient watering) can exacerbate a mildew problem.

That pretty much describes the last 3 months here in Rhode Island. So I take it these spores can spread to other stuff in the yard?

I have a complete brittle and brown thumb, but this house we got last summer was previously owned by an ambitious gardener and I don’t think I’ve killed anything yet.

I think I’ve noticed soapy leaves on other plants, but it’s too dark to confirm tonight. There are roses and hydrangeas on either side of this guy.

Is this a lilac for sure? I kind of hate the smell of them (I think they’re the cause of a weird sensation in my ENT that makes it feel like my voice is echoing in my head or that I’m hearing under a capsized canoe), but I was most likely at boot camp when it bloomed.