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Tom 29-06-2003 02:05 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous yers, and I'm
worried I'm going to lose the trees. What can I do to dissuade the
Beetles w/o toxifying the fruit?

I've heard of using Milky Spore, but will that work in time to have an
affect this season?

Thanks,

T. Young

P.S. Please don't reply to email . It's no good anymore.

Susan H. Simko 30-06-2003 10:08 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
Tom wrote:
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous yers, and I'm
worried I'm going to lose the trees. What can I do to dissuade the
Beetles w/o toxifying the fruit?


Don't know but would love to hear some options aside for Sevin...

I've heard of using Milky Spore, but will that work in time to have an
affect this season?


No, it won't help this year. However, that should not stop you from
doing it. My understanding is that it takes a couple fo years to reach
optimum. I put some down last year and have seen a marked decrease in
japanese bettles this year. In fact, I've been curious about other
people's experiences because without that, there's no way of knowing if
it's simply a low JB year or the Milky Spore.

BTW, if you're using those bag-a-bug traps, get rid of them. The
research I did on them some time ago seems to point towards the fact
that they actually attract more JBs to your garden than they kill.

Susan
shsimko at duke dot edu


[email protected] 02-07-2003 10:08 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
In article , Susan H. Simko wrote:
Tom wrote:
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous yers, and I'm
worried I'm going to lose the trees. What can I do to dissuade the
Beetles w/o toxifying the fruit?


Don't know but would love to hear some options aside for Sevin...

I've heard of using Milky Spore, but will that work in time to have an
affect this season?


No, it won't help this year. However, that should not stop you from
doing it. My understanding is that it takes a couple fo years to reach
optimum. I put some down last year and have seen a marked decrease in
japanese bettles this year. In fact, I've been curious about other
people's experiences because without that, there's no way of knowing if
it's simply a low JB year or the Milky Spore.

BTW, if you're using those bag-a-bug traps, get rid of them. The
research I did on them some time ago seems to point towards the fact
that they actually attract more JBs to your garden than they kill.

Susan
shsimko at duke dot edu


Milky spore will only work on the grubs and probably not until next
year. Nothin wrong with Sevin though. About the safest you can use.

--
Wes Dukes (wdukes.pobox@com) Swap the . and the @ to email me please.

spam@www.spam.com is a garbage address.

Kira Dirlik 06-07-2003 06:05 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 21:05:17 GMT, wrote:

Tom wrote:
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous years .......


Milky spore will only work on the grubs and probably not until next
year. Nothin wrong with Sevin though. About the safest you can use.

Wes Dukes (wdukes.pobox@com) Swap the . and the @ to email me please.


For Japanese Beetles, I just go around with my trusty plastic
container of water plus a few drops of dish washing liquid to the
plants that seem to attract them, and urge them into it. I do this at
least once a day. (Over the years I have seen a big decrease in
numbers of the JBs AND their grub stage in my garden soil.)
A neighbor who raises bees posted to our neighborhood Yahoo group
asking us to please not use Sevin dust. The bees go to the plants,
collect the dust just like pollen, take it back to the hive and the
whole colony gets wiped out. I've been trying to hand-pick the flea
beetles off my eggplants, peppers, squash and potatoes, but they are a
lot more astute (and tiny) than the JB's. It isn't working.
Such dilemas. Such chain reactions to things.
Kira

Kira Dirlik 06-07-2003 06:17 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 21:05:17 GMT, wrote:

Tom wrote:
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous years .......


Milky spore will only work on the grubs and probably not until next
year. Nothin wrong with Sevin though. About the safest you can use.

Wes Dukes (wdukes.pobox@com) Swap the . and the @ to email me please.


For Japanese Beetles, I just go around with my trusty plastic
container of water plus a few drops of dish washing liquid to the
plants that seem to attract them, and urge them into it. I do this at
least once a day. (Over the years I have seen a big decrease in
numbers of the JBs AND their grub stage in my garden soil.)
A neighbor who raises bees posted to our neighborhood Yahoo group
asking us to please not use Sevin dust. The bees go to the plants,
collect the dust just like pollen, take it back to the hive and the
whole colony gets wiped out. I've been trying to hand-pick the flea
beetles off my eggplants, peppers, squash and potatoes, but they are a
lot more astute (and tiny) than the JB's. It isn't working.
Such dilemas. Such chain reactions to things.
Kira

Kira Dirlik 06-07-2003 06:21 PM

Can I save my apple trees from Japanese Beetles
 
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 21:05:17 GMT, wrote:

Tom wrote:
Hi.

I've had two Granny Smith Apple trees for three years and they've
survived yearly bouts with Japanese beetles with only minor damage.
This year they are ten times worse than in previous years .......


Milky spore will only work on the grubs and probably not until next
year. Nothin wrong with Sevin though. About the safest you can use.

Wes Dukes (wdukes.pobox@com) Swap the . and the @ to email me please.


For Japanese Beetles, I just go around with my trusty plastic
container of water plus a few drops of dish washing liquid to the
plants that seem to attract them, and urge them into it. I do this at
least once a day. (Over the years I have seen a big decrease in
numbers of the JBs AND their grub stage in my garden soil.)
A neighbor who raises bees posted to our neighborhood Yahoo group
asking us to please not use Sevin dust. The bees go to the plants,
collect the dust just like pollen, take it back to the hive and the
whole colony gets wiped out. I've been trying to hand-pick the flea
beetles off my eggplants, peppers, squash and potatoes, but they are a
lot more astute (and tiny) than the JB's. It isn't working.
Such dilemas. Such chain reactions to things.
Kira


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