![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Tags: ants, garden |
|
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hi All,
I seem to have discovered an ants nest at the base of a young fruit tree in my back yard. It's well away from the house, but I am concerned that the ants may damage the tree. I only started noticing them some time after I sprinkled cow manure and laid some mulch. Is there anything I can do without poisoning the tree? Regards, Rick. |
| Ads |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
g'day rick,
the ants are unlikely to do damage to the tree as such, but they could bring in thrips/mealy bugs/scale, and infest the tree with these as they use these bugs as a food source. so you need to protect the tree from that. there is a gel you can buy that fruit orchardists use to paint around the trunk and create a sticky barrier the ants can't cross. or you can smear vaseline around the trunk with the same effect. the ants can be killed or moved on in number of ways, set a dripping hose up over the nest this can move them on after about 4 days, or flood the nest a few times a day for about the same amount of days. or you could look on my remedies page for a variety of ant control methods. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://hub.dataline.net.au/~gardnlen/ |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
Thanks for the advice Len. I will give it a go. The ants don't appear to be
climbing the trunking. They're isolated to the ground around the tree. "len brauer" wrote in message ... g'day rick, the ants are unlikely to do damage to the tree as such, but they could bring in thrips/mealy bugs/scale, and infest the tree with these as they use these bugs as a food source. so you need to protect the tree from that. there is a gel you can buy that fruit orchardists use to paint around the trunk and create a sticky barrier the ants can't cross. or you can smear vaseline around the trunk with the same effect. the ants can be killed or moved on in number of ways, set a dripping hose up over the nest this can move them on after about 4 days, or flood the nest a few times a day for about the same amount of days. or you could look on my remedies page for a variety of ant control methods. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://hub.dataline.net.au/~gardnlen/ |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| fire ants in veggie garden | Michelle Ryan | Texas | 2 | 05-04-2003 12:11 PM |
| Ants in the garden | peep | Australia | 3 | 05-04-2003 09:08 AM |
| fire ants in veggie garden | Michelle Ryan | Texas | 7 | 02-04-2003 10:44 PM |
| High Fiving Mofo Gardening | Cereoid+10 | Gardening | 0 | 16-02-2003 06:15 PM |
| In the Garden of Osama bin Laden | paghat | Gardening | 1 | 27-01-2003 04:00 PM |