- Thread starter
- #21
journey11
Garden Master
Insecticidal soap sprayed on does help repel those flea beetles. You have to keep reapplying though. They can wipe out a transplant or a seedling early on, so that's when I patrol for them. They really like turnips! Once the plant reaches a good size, I don't worry about it as much. I think they like the tender seedlings best anyway.
The grey stink bugs only started coming inside maybe 2 years ago. Catching them in the garden is so difficult, I prefer to spray a time or two just after fruit set to knock back their population, especially on my tomatoes. They hide really well too on the undersides of the leaves. It's very disappointing to finally get a ripe tomato and find that they have sucked the juices out of large areas of the skin. I can't bring myself to eat a part that they have touched and that makes for a lot of time and tomato wasted on paring.
The harlequin bugs resemble the grey stink bugs, but they prefer brassicas.
We've been dealing with the Asian lady beetles for about 15 years though. Hateful little things. I've had them land on me in my sleep and bite me. We used to find them clustered by the 100's in the corners of south-facing windows and all you could do was vacuum them, but now they've dwindled to a couple here, a couple there.
The grey stink bugs only started coming inside maybe 2 years ago. Catching them in the garden is so difficult, I prefer to spray a time or two just after fruit set to knock back their population, especially on my tomatoes. They hide really well too on the undersides of the leaves. It's very disappointing to finally get a ripe tomato and find that they have sucked the juices out of large areas of the skin. I can't bring myself to eat a part that they have touched and that makes for a lot of time and tomato wasted on paring.
The harlequin bugs resemble the grey stink bugs, but they prefer brassicas.
We've been dealing with the Asian lady beetles for about 15 years though. Hateful little things. I've had them land on me in my sleep and bite me. We used to find them clustered by the 100's in the corners of south-facing windows and all you could do was vacuum them, but now they've dwindled to a couple here, a couple there.