digitS'
Garden Master
Yesterday, I was tilling a spot for more carrots, beets, and where the peppers and eggplant will go. I saw 'em! Flea beetles, scurrying around and one, obviously very pregnant, Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata)!
I managed to "till in" the Leptinotarsa decemlineata ! The carrots and beets are probably safe from both of these pests but I felt compelled to spray the peas with rotenone/pyrethrum because of flea beetle damage, today. Peas! Of all things!
Flea beetles are often a problem in my garden - pitting the tomatoes and beans; all but destroying young cole crops. This year, they decided to wreck the peas :/! Having so much rock in the garden gives the beetles a place to hang out, in the shade, after feasting on garden plants.
I think the pea seedlings will get some some relief.
The Leptinotarsa decemlineata, I'm not so sure of my arsenal . Last year, I had lots of eggplants and, for awhile, thought I'd have lots of eggplant to harvest. What I finally got was too bitter to eat and if stress has anything to do with flavor - those poor eggplant sure took a beating from the Colorado potato bugs!!
I couldn't keep 'em off 'em! The Bt spray that used to be so effective against the potato bugs, Bacillus thuringiensis tenebrionis is no longer available. My choice is to use Spinosad this year, altho' I'll have lots less eggplant for the pests to damage. The rotenone/pyrethrum will kill them but they kept coming back again and again. It was an all out assault last year and me and the eggplant lost :/.
Spinosad is a completely new-to-me bug killer. I looked at information from Cornell on Spinosad and, altho' it looks like it is most effective against caterpillars, apparently it can kill potato bug larva. I'm not sure that I've got a choice on the organic side of things. Grow very few eggplants or none is an alternative, I suppose.
Steve
I managed to "till in" the Leptinotarsa decemlineata ! The carrots and beets are probably safe from both of these pests but I felt compelled to spray the peas with rotenone/pyrethrum because of flea beetle damage, today. Peas! Of all things!
Flea beetles are often a problem in my garden - pitting the tomatoes and beans; all but destroying young cole crops. This year, they decided to wreck the peas :/! Having so much rock in the garden gives the beetles a place to hang out, in the shade, after feasting on garden plants.
I think the pea seedlings will get some some relief.
The Leptinotarsa decemlineata, I'm not so sure of my arsenal . Last year, I had lots of eggplants and, for awhile, thought I'd have lots of eggplant to harvest. What I finally got was too bitter to eat and if stress has anything to do with flavor - those poor eggplant sure took a beating from the Colorado potato bugs!!
I couldn't keep 'em off 'em! The Bt spray that used to be so effective against the potato bugs, Bacillus thuringiensis tenebrionis is no longer available. My choice is to use Spinosad this year, altho' I'll have lots less eggplant for the pests to damage. The rotenone/pyrethrum will kill them but they kept coming back again and again. It was an all out assault last year and me and the eggplant lost :/.
Spinosad is a completely new-to-me bug killer. I looked at information from Cornell on Spinosad and, altho' it looks like it is most effective against caterpillars, apparently it can kill potato bug larva. I'm not sure that I've got a choice on the organic side of things. Grow very few eggplants or none is an alternative, I suppose.
Steve