So, second season at my house and this year's scourge has turned out to be aphids (last year was thrips).
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How did they get the leg up on me? It wasn't until I noticed healthy leaves dropping and noticing them on the leaves..."on" the leaves.
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So I started my campaign of wiping them out *but* I have a resident population of Mantises that prevents me from spraying.
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3,000 ladybugs latter, it became obvious that they were no match for 500,000 aphids...and 2 days later I maybe have 10 left in the garden.
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So a manual smoosh and water blast campaign began...leaf by leaf on the 3 most affected plants.
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Took them to the sick-bay, removed a couple ladybugs and check for mantises...all clear and a hefty dousing of Azamax after the manual smoosh and spritz.
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So far the plants look great and should recover fine. Wondering why other plants were not affected it dawned on me...These bastards started on the underside of the leaves and only when that became overcrowded did I begin to notice them "on" the top side of the leaves.
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Putting my theory to the test, the "unaffected" plants had their undersides examined and sure enough, minor infestations present. More manual smooshing and spritzing. Going to get another batch of ladybugs and hope another dozen or so take up residence. I don't mind having several thousands buzzing around my neighborhood...may not help directly but indirectly they may be a boon by ravaging other infested areas around me.
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Lesson? Check under your leaves! Manual control is viable depending on scope and your free time to tend to your garden, don't spray where mantises hang out and even though the bulk of ladybugs fly away...You'll keep a few and you're saturating your neighborhood with these amazing predators. And don't expect them to correct an out-of-control problem like I had
-
How did they get the leg up on me? It wasn't until I noticed healthy leaves dropping and noticing them on the leaves..."on" the leaves.
-
So I started my campaign of wiping them out *but* I have a resident population of Mantises that prevents me from spraying.
-
3,000 ladybugs latter, it became obvious that they were no match for 500,000 aphids...and 2 days later I maybe have 10 left in the garden.
-
So a manual smoosh and water blast campaign began...leaf by leaf on the 3 most affected plants.
-
Took them to the sick-bay, removed a couple ladybugs and check for mantises...all clear and a hefty dousing of Azamax after the manual smoosh and spritz.
-
So far the plants look great and should recover fine. Wondering why other plants were not affected it dawned on me...These bastards started on the underside of the leaves and only when that became overcrowded did I begin to notice them "on" the top side of the leaves.
-
Putting my theory to the test, the "unaffected" plants had their undersides examined and sure enough, minor infestations present. More manual smooshing and spritzing. Going to get another batch of ladybugs and hope another dozen or so take up residence. I don't mind having several thousands buzzing around my neighborhood...may not help directly but indirectly they may be a boon by ravaging other infested areas around me.
-
Lesson? Check under your leaves! Manual control is viable depending on scope and your free time to tend to your garden, don't spray where mantises hang out and even though the bulk of ladybugs fly away...You'll keep a few and you're saturating your neighborhood with these amazing predators. And don't expect them to correct an out-of-control problem like I had