Hornworms

seedcorn

Garden Master
Joined
Jun 21, 2008
Messages
9,651
Reaction score
9,976
Points
397
Location
NE IN
Picked about 8 tomatoes, was so happy until...........saw stems w/no leaves. As is usual, I couldn't find them. I get them every year, so guess it's time. I sprayed all of the tomatoes down w/soapy water with a little foliar feed. I was hoping to find some and feed them to the chicks. Altho I've never had any luck getting chickens to eat them.

Any suggestions?
 

HunkieDorie23

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Apr 29, 2009
Messages
1,066
Reaction score
36
Points
177
Location
Georgia Bound
seedcorn said:
Picked about 8 tomatoes, was so happy until...........saw stems w/no leaves. As is usual, I couldn't find them. I get them every year, so guess it's time. I sprayed all of the tomatoes down w/soapy water with a little foliar feed. I was hoping to find some and feed them to the chicks. Altho I've never had any luck getting chickens to eat them.

Any suggestions?
If you look at the ground around around your tomatoes you will see some dark brown droppings from the worms. This is how I track them down. Good luck.
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
26,686
Reaction score
32,336
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)
If the chicks won't eat them, the chickadees will!

I haven't had to kill a hornworm since I started growing sunflowers in the garden. The sunflowers are visited constantly by house finches, chipping sparrows and chickadees. It starts well before they have mature seeds.

It is almost as tho' these birds are staking out a claim to the sunflowers. Anyway, they are major caterpillar eaters during their nesting season the ornithologists tell us.

I began to suspect their help when there were just a couple of sunflowers. I noticed hornworm damage to a tomato growing near them. Before I could get out there with the spray, the plant began to heal and grow new leaves. That was about 7 years ago. I've had lots of sunflowers in the garden ever since and haven't seen a hornworm.

Steve
 

beavis

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Dec 1, 2008
Messages
760
Reaction score
1
Points
128
Location
Ramona, California, ZONE 9b
Interesting.

Hoodat most likely won't have chickadees helping him out where he is located in San Diego county, but house finches galore, will a small amount of Chipping Sparrows.

The only chickadee we get here in San Diego county usually frequents the mountains and is called...Mountain Chickadee.

I always plant sunflowers near my tomatoes, haven't seen a hornworm yet, but I never made a correlation between sunflower/bird/hornworm before.

We do have an abundance of Lesser Goldfinches that seem to like to feed on the basal sections of the sunflower leaves.
 

hoodat

Garden Addicted
Joined
Apr 28, 2010
Messages
3,758
Reaction score
509
Points
260
Location
Palm Desert CA
I planted some Mammoth sunflower and got very cool reception from the birds. No one came to the party. Next year I think I'll plant something like teddy bear sunflowers that have smaller seeds.
Haven't seen any house finches yet. in fact I've only seeen a half dozen or so species that seem interested in my garden.
A sooty flycatcher moved in recently. He flies back and forth back and forth between the East and West fences. It's fun to see him snatch a fly in mid air. I hope he leaves my bees alone.
 

cwhit590

Garden Ornament
Joined
Oct 21, 2009
Messages
277
Reaction score
5
Points
84
Location
SW Michigan
I found about half a dozen hornworms on 1 of my tomato plants last night....:/ They are hard to spot! Had to sit there and stare at the leaves a few minutes before I saw them....hopefully I got them all.

I have sunflowers in the garden but they are not blooming yet, and they aren't next to my tomatoes....maybe I'll try planting a few smaller ones by the tomatoes next year. :idunno
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
26,686
Reaction score
32,336
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)
I am a fan of the birds and even adjust to the quail eating my ripe tomatoes and taking dustbaths in my freshly seeded beds of lettuce. . .

The English Sparrows have their role . . . beyond eating my bok choy and lettuce transplants . . . I am always in a sweat to get plants out of the greenhouse and onto sawhorses in the yard so that the sparrows can go thru them. They do a much better job of getting rid of the aphids than I can do in the greenhouse.

There are very few birds that feed their nestlings seeds or other plant material. Insects are the food of choice. I was even reading an abstract of a study that indicated that the shape of chick strarter feed can make a difference in how much they eat. Yep, if it looks, somehow, more like a bug the chicks eat it readily and eat more of it . . .

Steve
 

Holachicka

Deeply Rooted
Joined
May 25, 2010
Messages
172
Reaction score
39
Points
156
Location
Folsom, CA
I read somewhere that if you take a black light and go out at night, the worms will be easier to spot because the white dots will be highlighted... Don't know if it works or not, I haven't tried it yet!
 

vfem

Garden Addicted
Joined
Aug 10, 2008
Messages
7,516
Reaction score
43
Points
242
Location
Fuquay, NC
cwhit590 said:
I found about half a dozen hornworms on 1 of my tomato plants last night....:/ They are hard to spot! Had to sit there and stare at the leaves a few minutes before I saw them....hopefully I got them all.

I have sunflowers in the garden but they are not blooming yet, and they aren't next to my tomatoes....maybe I'll try planting a few smaller ones by the tomatoes next year. :idunno
Its like staring at those posters they used to have at the mall, if you stand and look long enough you start to see them.
 

Latest posts

Top