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Old 18-11-2007, 11:31 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
David in Normandy[_3_] David in Normandy[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2007
Posts: 129
Default Beware who you listen to....

In article , Sacha
says...
We use mainly yellow pellets and they would be hard to mistake for white.
Next time you go to a gc or nursery, either look for some on sale or ask the
nurseryman to show them to you. But as Charlie says, they're scattered
throughout the compost, eggs are in clumps. You just have to imagine the
insect sitting in one spot while it lays its eggs. It's not going to move
about through the soil scattering eggs as it goes. Your query is by no
means unusual BTW. I should say urg receives two or three questions about
this every year.
But the distribution of the pellets should be a helpful clue. When we make
up a compost mix here, it's like making a cake on a giant scale! The bag of
compost is emptied onto a potting bench, a bit to one side. Pellets are
scattered on top and then the whole thing is turned over and over to the
other side and then back again.


Last week while wandering through a local GC a lovely little shrub
caught my eye - it had shed all its leaves and it just had sweet
smelling pink blossom, so I bought it - a Viburnum bodnantense "Charles
Lamont". On removing it from the pot, the bottom centre of the rootball
had a large clump of around 40 creamy/yellow coloured "beads", which
penetrated partly into the rootball, so I removed (squashed) all those.
As it was a clump they must have been eggs.

Nice plant. It is now in a big tub next to the front door.
--
David in Normandy