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Friday, August 29, 2014
Viragrow Delivers! : Planting Vegetables in Composted Soils During Summer Heat
Viragrow Delivers! : Planting Vegetables in Composted Soils During the ...: Soils containing composts are rich and full of nutrients for plants. It is very important to get seeds and transplants off to a good start ...
Viragrow Delivers! : Uncomposted Mulch Not a Big Concern
Viragrow Delivers! : Uncomposted Mulch Not a Big Concern: Q. Does incompletely composted material draw fertilizer components away from plants? This is mulch. It should be applied to the soil su...
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
Community Garden Thanks First Choice Tree Service!
A hearty thanks goes out to First Choice Tree Service and Ryans Tree Service. They helped out big time with the move of the Provident living community garden to a new location. Those guys successfully
moved 24 re-enforced concrete planter beds weighing an estimated 7000 lbs each.
Milan Weedman (certified Arborist) with first choice tre service was there to
coordinate and supervise with the help of Jason from First Choice and Ryan
Brooksby From Ryan's tree service.
Provident Living Community Garden has a new home and a fabulous community garden! Give those guys some thanks! Pay a visit to Milan at his blog http://milanweedman.wordpress.com/
Provident Living Community Garden has a new home and a fabulous community garden! Give those guys some thanks! Pay a visit to Milan at his blog http://milanweedman.wordpress.com/
When are figs ready to pick?
Q.
We have a small fig tree, about two years old. It has figs in place, but we do
not know how to determine when they are ripe for picking.
A.
The figs are ready when the neck on the fig starts to bend and the fruit
“sags”. Here this white fig is ready and the neck is bent. The green ones are
not and are straight.
Once bent you must
pick right away. Once they are ready you will pick nearly daily. They do not
ripen off of the tree. They must be picked fully ripe.
Labels:
how to pick figs,
ripe figs,
when to pick figs
Understanding and Controlling the Leaffooted Plant Bug
Q.
What is the best attack for these pesty, scary looking creatures. We had
them last year. Haven't seen them yet this season. Is there
something to keep them away?
A.
This first part I am explaining will be a bit late for you now but prevention
should start during the winter months when they can be seen in the landscape as
overwintering adults ready to lay eggs in the spring. I have seen adults on
bottlebrush in home landscapes in southern Nevada and I am sure they are
probably overwintering on a number of evergreen plants in winter months.
Leaffooted plant bug on nopal cacttus. |
Leaffooted plant bug on pomegranate. |
From: http://www.whatsthatbug.com/2009/02/25/mating-leaf-footed-bugs-3/ |
Eggs of leaf-footed bug. Photograph by Lacy Hyche, Auburn University. |
Nymph of the western leaffooted bug. Photograph by Henry Fadamiro, Auburn University. |
Since
these insects can fly as adults they will move from plant to plant for
sources of food. This means that they will come into your yard from neighbors
as well all during the growing season. So just because you control them once
during the season you will have them again as long as there is food in your
yard for them to eat.
What
do we know about leaffooted plant bug?
- They like to feed on pomegranates, almonds, pistachios, tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash, corn, peach, nectarine and I am sure some others.
- They are closely related to stinkbugs and squash bugs, feed and reproduce like them and can be confused with them because they look kind of similar.
- They overwinter from year to year in the landscapes.
- It takes about 50 or 60 days to produce adults from eggs laid in the spring.
- They feed with a long hypodermic needle-like mouth that is inserted into soft plant tissue like leaves and fruit.
- Their feeding early when fruit is developing can cause threads of sap to stick out of the fruit.
- Their feeding causes misshapen fruit or causes fruits or nuts to drop off of the tree.
- Their feeding can also cause diseases to enter the fruit.
How
to Control Them
They
are difficult to control because they hide unless they are swarming and
reproducing near the fruit.
Hard
or conventional pesticides such as Sevin or synthetic pyrethrins are the most
effective for rapid kill. These can be found as ingredients in some common
vegetable or fruit sprays in nurseries or garden centers.
These same
ingredients are used commercially where leaffooted plant bug is active. These
types of chemicals leave behind a residual on plants that offer some protection
for a number of days after they are applied. They also present some safety
concerns for homeowners when used without caution in home landscapes so make
sure you read the label thoroughly if you choose to go this route.
Organic
control is more difficult because these chemicals are short-lived and don’t
leave behind much of a residual. You will not control this pest without more
work on your part when using organic methods. That is the tradeoff when using
organic methods. With conventional pesticides like Sevin a few passes during
fruit set and development will give you some good control. Organic methods may
require more inspection of the tree and fruit on your part and spraying more
frequently.
Soap sprays like Safers insecticidal soap will give good control if
the spray lands on the insects. It leaves no residual once sprayed. Oils like
Neem have been reported to give good control. Other oils include horticultural
oils and canola oil. Organic sprays like Bt will not work on this insect.
Spinosad has not been reported to work on this insect either. Another
possibility are pyrethrin sprays which may give you good knockdown when sprayed
on them directly.
A
common mistake is to think that just because they organic sprays they will not
hurt anything except the enemy insect. This is not true. Organic sprays will
kill many different insects, good and bad. So directing the sprays at the enemy
insects is important. It is also important to spray very early in the morning
or near sundown. Spray when there is no wind and cover both the upper and lower
sides of the leaves. Do not use one spray over and over. Use several sprays in
rotation with each other so you do not end up with an explosion in the
population of insects not controlled or building up insect immunity to the
spray.
Oleanders Will Grow in Containers
Q.
I have two pink dwarf oleanders planted in 18 inch clay pots which have very
healthy looking foliage but very few blossoms. One of my "expert"
gardener friends says simply that "oleanders don't like pots".
Another "expert" says that I'm watering too much. Are either of these
guys right or do you have any suggestions that might get some me some blossoms?
A.
We have dwarf oleanders at the Research Center in containers and they bloom
just fine. Thge dwarf oleander might be a better selection for containers. There might be a couple of things you could try. If the container is
small you might have to water more often to compensate for the small soil
volume.
Plants in containers need to be repotted every two or three years. Very small
containers, every year. Large containers might make it up to five years.
Oleanders
that are not getting enough water will look normal but have a very open canopy
and not bloom well. Oleanders are high water users and love fertilizer. They do
not like to be watered daily but will not do their best if the soil starts
drying too much between waterings.
You
can try using a soil moisture meter sold for houseplants that you can buy from
the nursery for about $7. Water when the dial is about half way between wet and
dry, do not let it get totally dry. Next, use a fertilizer like Miracle Gro and
water it into the soil about once every six to eight weeks.
Cover
the soil in the container with mulch to help keep the soil moist. About three
inches would be enough. If oleanders are young, or if they are pruned with a
hedge shears, flowers will be delayed or produce very few.
Don't
prune with a hedge shears if possible. They should be pruned with pruning
shears but not hedged or gimbaled.
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