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Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by toastyturnip 8a SC (My Page) on Thu, Apr 24, 14 at 22:55
| Looks great Kevin! Where did you purchase your lacewing eggs from? I ordered ladybugs two years ago and they annihilated the aphids in about two days and then all flew off to the neighbors yard. My garden size has since grown quite a bit so hopefully all these guys will hang around this year. |
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| :) I don't grow special plants to attract beneficials since I'm in the middle of many acres of diverse grass/legume/"weed" land, but I always love seeing the beneficials in my garden too. Lacewings and ladybug larva and praying mantises, plus insect-eating birds are some I can count on regularly. Recently I applied beneficial nematode that I did buy, and while digging an area I had sprayed I found some good sign that they are doing their thing! I've never been so excited to find a rotting grub before. Nice pictures, guys. |
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| I am in Upstate SC and my garden is far, far behind yours. Wow, what a difference a few miles makes. Great beneficial insects! |
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| Toasty: Here's where I got them--- http://www.rinconvitova.com/ Did 2 releases about a month apart. The problem is... ants! If you have any at all, they'll sniff them out and make a feast in no time at all! Once they're established, they tend to do better since they hang on strands like in the pic(blurry). But, on the cards, I had to get creative. You can buy the larvae and take that problem out of the equation, but they cost more and, I imagine, need to be shipped very quickly. You should probably try to find a place as close to you as possible for shipping sake. I've released ladybugs in the past, but I have to believe the ones I see now are native. Where I noticed them most this year was on some stinging nettle that I let get out of control. It was loaded with aphids, but it was also loaded with ladybugs. Which is why i admire sunnibel's situation. Native plants are probably the way to go, but everything in Socal is so ugly, so i opt to go with the popular and easy choices like alyssum, marigolds, zinnias, wildflowers, sunflowers, cilantro and the like. Been meaning to get ahold of some tansy, yarrow, and buckwheat seeds. Just have no idea where I'd plant them. And there's always the water issue here. The mantids, I'm not too sure about. They're indiscriminate, so they eat the good guys too. I let them go last year because they were loaded on my maters, but they weren't doing a good enough job. I get this thing called the Tomato suck bug on my indeterminates every year and they ravage my tomatoes. Supposedly minute pirate bugs and damsel bugs will get them but I've never seen any of those. So, I'm trying something different this year... Determinate Romas and semi-determinate Celebrities. Love the tree frog! I live about a mile from the San Diego River, but haven't seen a frog in decades. It's just too damn dry here. Sunnibel: Good to hear about the beneficial nematodes. been meaning to try those too. Kevin |
Here is a link that might be useful: Tomato suck bug
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| These are from last year - busy increasing the predator numbers for me. You just have to hold your nerve as you watch the aphids start to appear - the ladybirds will be along soon and will start raising the next generation of aphid guzzlers. |
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- Posted by prairiemoon2 zone 6a/MA (My Page) on Fri, Apr 25, 14 at 13:42
| Great shot, Flora, and I've not seen a ladybug that is more black then red. I agree about 'holding your nerve' when the aphids show up. [g] Just about the time I start thinking about whether to at least get out the hose and spray them, all of a sudden they're gone. I actually start thinking crazy thoughts, like maybe I need more aphids to attract more ladybugs. :-) |
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| Agreed. Great shot flora! Kevin |
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- Posted by toastyturnip 8a SC (My Page) on Fri, Apr 25, 14 at 22:14
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- Posted by toastyturnip 8a SC (My Page) on Fri, Apr 25, 14 at 22:21
| Woohooman, thanks for the heads up on purchasing the lacewing eggs. I might give it a shot later on depending on how bad the pests get. I've never heard of a tomato suck bug but it sounds like they cause similar damage as leaf footed and stink bugs. They caused quite a few ugly tomatoes for me last year until I finally just dusted the plants with diatomaceous earth. I'm going to try to avoid it this year since it's non-selective. |
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| Yes, more great pictures! The beneficial nematodes were this year's "I'll try it" investment. The thing I hope to control the most with them is the onion maggot, but I got a mix that will help with ants, termites, army worm, various overwintering moth pupa (svb?) and sundry other things as well. I was pleased to see sign that they were indeed there, as they are microscopic and you just have to have faith they made it into the soil. I just spotted another of my favorite beneficials on the window-jumping spiders. I don't know why they seem to have so much more personality than other spiders, but I always smile when I see one. |
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| I just learned that sunflowers are great traps for aphids. My artichokes always get aphids but have been relatively clear this year. I have tons of ladybugs showing up on the adjacent sunflowers. The sunflowers have a bunch of aphids on them. Next year, I'll plant plenty of sunflowers and also nastituriums because they are great aphid traps,too. |
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| Thought I'd post this great dragon fly shot I got last year - on a dahlia, not a vegetable, but I have a smallish yard, so anywhere I see them I'm happy. |
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| I clearly need a new camera - and probably new glasses. One day I'll post something in focus;-) |
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- Posted by nancyjane_gardener USDA 8ish No CA (My Page) on Fri, May 9, 14 at 21:08
| I have my herb garden right next to the vege/flower garden and have NO shortage of bees! (Even though there's supposed to be a shortage, or a bee die off, or something!) They LOVE LOVE LOVE the herbs! Nancy |
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| Good deal nancy! Yep. Love growing things that fight the pests and can EAT too. Kevin |
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