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-   -   Compost beatsies (again) (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/australia/94887-compost-beatsies-again.html)

M 28-05-2005 05:29 AM

Compost beatsies (again)
 
I've always had slaters and worms and various crawlies in my little
black Kmart-type compost bin, and they've all worked together to make me
some nice rich dirt.

However, in the last week, when I turn over a few forkfuls of stuff, I
unearth MANY curl-grubs - like 40 in about three minutes! There are
clusters of the fat little buggers!

This can't be good. In the past there have been one or two turn up at
the bottom of the compost, but now they're all through the middle. A
couple is easy to remove when putting the compost on the garden, but
what about the dozens and dozens I'm finding now?

Any useful thoughts on what I should do???

Regards,
Mark.


Chookie 28-05-2005 08:10 AM

In article ,
M wrote:

However, in the last week, when I turn over a few forkfuls of stuff, I
unearth MANY curl-grubs - like 40 in about three minutes! There are
clusters of the fat little buggers!

This can't be good. In the past there have been one or two turn up at
the bottom of the compost, but now they're all through the middle. A
couple is easy to remove when putting the compost on the garden, but
what about the dozens and dozens I'm finding now?

Any useful thoughts on what I should do???


Get a pet chook?

--
Chookie -- Sydney, Australia
(Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply)

"In Melbourne there is plenty of vigour and eagerness, but there is
nothing worth being eager or vigorous about."
Francis Adams, The Australians, 1893.

Jumbuck 28-05-2005 02:32 PM

Hi Mark,
I live in Brisbane and have an acre block of land, eventually hoping to
build a house on it soon.
In the meantime I made contact with a couple of tree loppers who kindly gave
me loads of unwanted mulch which I dug copioulsy into proposed garden beds
thinking it would enrich the soil.
After about 6 months when I decided to plant, every time I dug a hole, I
found curl grubs in plague proportions, and I mean around 50 or 60 per
square metre. I had initially planted canna lilleys with the mulch which
wern't going too well so I pulled them out and honestly, the roots resembled
a bee-hive of curl-grubs.
So I went to the local produce store and bought some poison to attack them
with, but the trouble was that when I got home and read the
instructions/warnings, I wasn't gamed to use it as I wanted to use the beds
for growing veggies (as well as ormanentals), and the label said not for
home use.
So I kept digging up and turning over the proposed garden bed soil and
squashed every curl grub I came across, hundreds of them.
My research on the internet indicated that curl-grubs are the lave of a
family of beetle called the "Scarab", such as the rhinoricious beetle, and
they love eating decaying vegetable matter, however their delicacy is the
tendertips of roots of certain plants.
Apart from locating them and sending them to the great happy hunting ground
via underfoot while digging, or using what I interpreted as a pretty lethal
poison, I havn't really came across the solution of how to eardicate them.
Apparently the bandicoot considers them a delicacy, as do magpies and
kookaburras, but as I see the evidence of them in action, they are hardly
making an impression in the curl grub numbers.
I would welcome anyone's opinion with crossed fingers as I previously made
an appeal to the group but didn't get a response - so does this fall into
the too-hard basket or where do we turn?
Regards and good luck Mark, hope we learn something,
Jim





"M" wrote in message
.. .
I've always had slaters and worms and various crawlies in my little black
Kmart-type compost bin, and they've all worked together to make me some
nice rich dirt.

However, in the last week, when I turn over a few forkfuls of stuff, I
unearth MANY curl-grubs - like 40 in about three minutes! There are
clusters of the fat little buggers!

This can't be good. In the past there have been one or two turn up at the
bottom of the compost, but now they're all through the middle. A couple is
easy to remove when putting the compost on the garden, but what about the
dozens and dozens I'm finding now?

Any useful thoughts on what I should do???

Regards,
Mark.




Dave 30-05-2005 10:47 AM

Hi
Generally these things are not a problem, as they feed on decaying plant
material. If you have a lot they may cause damage by moving around
among plant roots, and occasionally taking a nibble.

In the compost pile- don't worry. It is better not to dig ram mulch in
as it may drag nitrogen out of the soil as it breaks down. The white
grubs (scarab larvae) help to break down organic material.

Other species (most from different subfamilies) DO attack live plant
roots and are major pests around the World (e.g the "cane grubs" in
Australian sugar, the New Zealand "grass grub" and the Japanese beetle
in the USA).

Vigorous cultivation may disrupt them- give it a try.

The chemical imidacloprid (Confidor) may be effective as it works
against at least some pest species, and has very low toxicity to
vertebrates. Apply it as a soil drench. As far as I know it is not
registered for that use, so no guarantees, and the directions will not
be of much use. Try it on a small area, wait a few days and see what
happens. I would not treat compost piles- the grubs are beneficial (if
anything) in that environment - (Anybody knows otherwise, please correct
me).

Cheers,
Dave

Jumbuck wrote:
Hi Mark, I live in Brisbane and have an acre block of land,
eventually hoping to build a house on it soon. In the meantime I made
contact with a couple of tree loppers who kindly gave me loads of
unwanted mulch which I dug copioulsy into proposed garden beds
thinking it would enrich the soil. After about 6 months when I
decided to plant, every time I dug a hole, I found curl grubs in
plague proportions, and I mean around 50 or 60 per square metre. I
had initially planted canna lilleys with the mulch which wern't going
too well so I pulled them out and honestly, the roots resembled a
bee-hive of curl-grubs. So I went to the local produce store and
bought some poison to attack them with, but the trouble was that when
I got home and read the instructions/warnings, I wasn't gamed to use
it as I wanted to use the beds for growing veggies (as well as
ormanentals), and the label said not for home use. So I kept digging
up and turning over the proposed garden bed soil and squashed every
curl grub I came across, hundreds of them. My research on the
internet indicated that curl-grubs are the lave of a family of beetle
called the "Scarab", such as the rhinoricious beetle, and they love
eating decaying vegetable matter, however their delicacy is the
tendertips of roots of certain plants. Apart from locating them and
sending them to the great happy hunting ground via underfoot while
digging, or using what I interpreted as a pretty lethal poison, I
havn't really came across the solution of how to eardicate them.
Apparently the bandicoot considers them a delicacy, as do magpies and
kookaburras, but as I see the evidence of them in action, they are
hardly making an impression in the curl grub numbers. I would welcome
anyone's opinion with crossed fingers as I previously made an appeal
to the group but didn't get a response - so does this fall into the
too-hard basket or where do we turn? Regards and good luck Mark, hope
we learn something, Jim




"M" wrote in message
.. .

I've always had slaters and worms and various crawlies in my little
black Kmart-type compost bin, and they've all worked together to
make me some nice rich dirt.

However, in the last week, when I turn over a few forkfuls of
stuff, I unearth MANY curl-grubs - like 40 in about three minutes!
There are clusters of the fat little buggers!

This can't be good. In the past there have been one or two turn up
at the bottom of the compost, but now they're all through the
middle. A couple is easy to remove when putting the compost on the
garden, but what about the dozens and dozens I'm finding now?

Any useful thoughts on what I should do???

Regards, Mark.





M 30-05-2005 11:51 AM

Well, thanks all.

I'm most inclined towards Chookie's idea, but unfortunately the rotten
bloody local cats (thanks to their inconsiderate and unthinking bloody
owners) (don't get me started!) would make short work of any pet chooks.

I think I'll just leave them, and do a cull when I eventually spread the
compost around.

(Interestingly, I fed a heap to the maggies some time ago - they ate one
or two, but wouldn't take any more. They left me with half a tin of the
wriggling pver-sized maggots. Too many to use a Blundstone on.
Eventually bagged them and binned them. Yuk.)

Mark.


Jumbuck 30-05-2005 12:42 PM

Cheers Mark and very much appreciate your response Dave.

Don't know if I have the live-plant eating varity of curl grub or to just
try and ignore them?

Might take a sample to the Dept Primary Industry, have them positively
identified and go from there...

I will let the group know if I get any the wiser.
Regards,
Jumbuck.


"M" wrote in message
.. .
Well, thanks all.

I'm most inclined towards Chookie's idea, but unfortunately the rotten
bloody local cats (thanks to their inconsiderate and unthinking bloody
owners) (don't get me started!) would make short work of any pet chooks.

I think I'll just leave them, and do a cull when I eventually spread the
compost around.

(Interestingly, I fed a heap to the maggies some time ago - they ate one
or two, but wouldn't take any more. They left me with half a tin of the
wriggling pver-sized maggots. Too many to use a Blundstone on. Eventually
bagged them and binned them. Yuk.)

Mark.




jason 31-05-2005 04:44 AM

On Sat, 28 May 2005 14:29:16 +1000, M wrote:

I've always had slaters and worms and various crawlies in my little
black Kmart-type compost bin, and they've all worked together to make me
some nice rich dirt.

However, in the last week, when I turn over a few forkfuls of stuff, I
unearth MANY curl-grubs - like 40 in about three minutes! There are
clusters of the fat little buggers!

This can't be good. In the past there have been one or two turn up at
the bottom of the compost, but now they're all through the middle. A
couple is easy to remove when putting the compost on the garden, but
what about the dozens and dozens I'm finding now?

Any useful thoughts on what I should do???

Regards,
Mark.


Investogate a product called "BioGreen" its a biological insecticide
(fungal spores). Active constituent Metarhizium anisopliae/g.

may be what your looking for



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