23,822 Garden Web Discussions | Vegetable Gardening

Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
wantboost

How can I kill these worms?

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 9:19PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
woohooman San Diego CA zone 10a

Find them and squish them. Bt K variant may kill them but probably not before they nip the plant. Diatomaceous Earth supposedly controls them but is ineffective when wet and will kill beneficial insects, and you'll probably still lose the seedlings. Beneficial nematodes will work, but they're expensive and take time.

I gave you a 100% cure(since I started using them)to prevent them from nipping your seedlings. No toothpicks? Use twigs. Use nails.

Kevin

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 9:33PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Could you post pictures of the plants? There are many possible causes, most of them far more likely than any possible virus disease. But to be able to ID we'd need photos and much more information or a detailed description of the symptoms.

No point in ripping them out until you know what the real cause is and the symptoms you describe so far could be nothing more than too much water.

Dave

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 7:35PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
threedogsmom

I will take photos tomorrow, thank you. Stay tuned!

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 8:49PM
Sign Up to comment
Cucumber coming back?Can someone tell me if this is my cucumber vine coming back??
Posted by mommomsgarden(6/Jersey Girl!) June 9, 2014
5 Comments
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
CaraRose

Japanese Hops is considered invasive.

Here is a link that might be useful: http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/fact/huja1.htm

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 3:23PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
catherinet(5 IN)

Yep.....its hops vine. Its growing all over my property. :(

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 7:25PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
glib(5.5)

Also, next year go easy with the hose. I installed drip in part to minimize the amount of spray in the air. I also use a watering can when possible, or water from really close.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 1:23PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
ChicagoDeli37

Thanks ...what a bummer

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 6:56PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
lazy_gardens

Use the needles as mulch, or leave them where they fall! People pay big bucks for "pine straw".

They compost nicely, but a bit slowly, by themselves if you keep them moist. Mixing them with grass clippings is one way to speed up the needles and keep the grass from going stinky.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 1:09PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
digdirt2(6b-7a No.Cent. AR HZ8 Sun-35)

Lots of advantages and the only disadvantage is they are very slow to decompose as mentioned already. No problem when used as mulch. In the compost bin you want to add lots of nitrogen (greens) to speed them up or you can find your pile sitting dormant for a year.

Dave.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 4:10PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
slowjane CA/ Sunset 21

Hi everyone - I just wanted to follow up and show you how my tomatoes are doing these days. They recovered from the intense wilt and I think it was a combination of inconsistent watering/inconsistent moisture in the soil and the dreaded Santa Anas. I have a shade cloth setup now to use when necessary (we shall see what happens in September/October yikes).

Also, it turns out it is a San Marzano not a cherry - I had mixed up the tags. LOL. Oh, and I had posted about BER with this plant - probably also caused by inconsistent moisture - and that's also cleared up. I have a new method of watering using a 32oz yogurt container with pinholes in the bottom which I set on the soil several inches from the base of the plants and fill up so that it slowly moistens the soil. I've also stopped pruning it so hard and am letting it branch out, though trying to keep it vertical. Now I am waiting for the first ripe fruit.

Just wanted to give an update and say thanks to all of you for your help! I am learning so much. And so much still to learn. ;)

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 3:19PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
slowjane CA/ Sunset 21

And some actual fruit finally getting substantial post - BER ....

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 3:20PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

Absolutely. The bags will decompose eventually. You can use newspaper or cardboard as well.

Rodney

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 2:16PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
floyd2006

Thanks for your response and time to answer. Your thought is my thought, except they won't allow any herbicides on the plot, which I suppose only means I need to weed the grass more vigorously. The plot was mowed about a month ago and in the last week many sprouts of new asparagus are coming up that haven't been there in decades. Pretty impressive plant it is. I'm marking them all with stakes and will mulch and fertilize around them. Later, I will add grass clippings. Any further thoughts you might have would be most welcome. Thanks again.

    Bookmark     July 10, 2008 at 11:49PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
lokidog(Z5 UT)

This is a reply to a really old link but others may benefit... I would dig up the whole bed in the fall and replant it. Do this when the 'ferns' start to turn a bit brown. There will also likely be lots of extra crowns to transplant to other locations, as there will not be room in the current bed to put them. At that time, remove the sod, and dig out the soil to asparagus planting depth, and sift it to remove as many roots as possible. Then plant the asparagus as recommended for your area, but mulch with lots of leaves (or other organic material like old hay or straw - not herbicide applied grass clippings - as some herbicides could harm the asparagus). Put on six inches or even more. It will compact overwinter and asparagus comes up through heavy mulch while grass does not. Next year you should have more asparagus that ever. Keep vigilant and weed out every blade of grass. I use POAST - a grass herbicide myself! But I replant too.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 12:27PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
garden-of-simple

My cat has been pooping in my beds for years. At first I totally freaked out (still do when the meany pants digs up fresh planted seeds) but I'm mostly over it. I remove it when I see it. She pees in there too, fit I. Font of me as I'm yelling and shooing her.
Anyway, I read they like the clear spaces of the garden, so I've been adding my grass clippings to the bar spots. So far it's working, hopefully long enough for the crops to fill in and keep her out.

    Bookmark     June 6, 2014 at 8:15AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
michelliot(z7 ny)

worked for me with several stray cats destroying my lawn.

Scarecrow sprinkler

This post was edited by michelliot on Mon, Jun 9, 14 at 12:14

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 12:13PM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
fusion_power

I have an electric fence around my garden. One trick I use is to put a spark plug on one of the metal posts and attach a wire to the fence so that the spark plug sparks every time the fence clicks on. The spark makes a very audible pop. I don't know if it is the flash of light or the popping sound, but the deer avoid it like the plague. Raccoons ignore it so I put up a wire 6 inches off the ground to deter the masked bandits.

    Bookmark     June 6, 2014 at 11:05PM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
wertach zone 7-B SC

It must be the Game Cam!

I turned it off Sat. to take the card out to download the pics to my PC.

I got busy with other things and forgot to put the card back in and turn it back on.

Sunday morning I went out to turn it back on and check the garden. I found tracks all the way down a row of peas. The tops were nibbled on a lot of the plants.

When I checked this morning the tracks stopped at the edge. I guess they can hear the camera or the lights spook them.

No Dave, it doesn't have a flash, but it does have a little red LED light comes on when it is activated. It may make a noise, but I can't hear it.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 11:43AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK

Runner beans (Phaseolus coccineus) don't push the half bean shaped cotyledons out of the soil in the same way as Phaseolus vulgaris.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 11:08AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
2ajsmama

I just went out to plant more tomatoes, looked at my beans and what do you know, the first leaves ARE heart-shaped!

Can I change my vote? ;-)

I understand the conflicting desires - my DD started some tomato plants from Burpee seed that was mislabeled I had left over from last year, her science fair partner took some plants but we still have 7 of them - 3 in 1 small yogurt cup that need to be separated since they were started on Mother's Day. Only ones left inside under lights - tried giving a couple to my parents who like "regular, red, beefsteak tomatoes" (which these are) and they wouldn't take them b/c they were small and not hardened off. I guess I'm going to have to find room for them somewhere...

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 11:33AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

A photo of the leaves and plant will help immensely. Are the leaves actually curling or just drooping?

Rodney

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 11:09AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
changingitup(8 PDX)

We've just been having our first garden salads as well! Red freckled romaine, kale, arugula, snow peas and still getting the occasional few asparagus to chop up and add. Good stuff!. We've been living off strawberries as well. They have a great flavor but are a bit sour if not picked when just about to be too late. How about yours? Is there anything I could have added to my soil to help this?

I've also just planted some leaf lettuce in a shady area of the lawn in hopes of keeping it going longer. When the lettuce was dissapointing last year we switched to red Russian kale and it was delicious!

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 10:24AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
theforgottenone1013(MI zone 5b/6a)

I thought it was just me that couldn't see the photo so I didn't say anything. From the description of the salad it sounds delicious. :)

Rodney

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 11:08AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7

Any chance of a good picture of the damage? I think I see one leaf that seems to show symptoms from the Four Lined Plant Bug, a pest that seems to love herbs like mint, basil, and oregano.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 10:10AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
floral_uk z.8/9 SW UK

I'm not sure I'm seeing the same picture as everyone else. The plant I can see is very droopy and extremely sick looking - maybe from a fungus or cultural problem - but I can't see any bugs or bug faeces.

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 10:53AM
Sign Up to comment
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
planatus(6)

You have the three-lined potato beetle, not good news but probably manageable with spinosad if hand picking doesn't work. The extension pubs say they can be managed like Colorado potato beetles, and spinosad is the best organic control for CPB .

Have you or a neighbor grown tomatillo recently? I think that's their favorite nightshade.

Here is a link that might be useful: three lined potato beetle

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 8:15AM
Thank you for reporting this comment. Undo
galinas(5B)

I don't think anybody growing tomatillo around here. Most people have 5X5 slots where they grow very basic staff, mostly what I gave them form my leftovers, and I don't grow tomatillo. It is not a first year I have this beetle- only I thought they are cucumber beetles - I had those before I set up a screen house for my cucumbers. I don't think I will need any spray. Picking them at night from my 40 plants when all hard work already done and it is cool and pleasant gives me comforting feelings). Last year I didn't even collect their eggs, but there was no real damage. Thank you for identification!

    Bookmark     June 9, 2014 at 8:32AM
Sign Up to comment
© 2015 Houzz Inc. Houzz® The new way to design your home™