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The battle of the scale (not the diet kind)
Dianna,
After all this is "G" rated newsgroup. We can't be too graphic. How's this "When the hot young masculine scale comes upon a sweet curvy babe of a scale....." Gene "Diana Kulaga" wrote in message news:aHOth.780$ch1.474@bigfe9... "When the momma scale mates with the daddy scale"........ You owe me a keyboard, Gene! Diana "Gene Schurg" wrote in message news:dtyth.6934$U81.4308@trnddc06... Diana, When the momma scale mates with the daddy scale the momma lays eggs under her shell. At some point the momma scale dies and protects the eggs with her shell which gets leathery and dry. After some time the eggs hatch and a bunch of small whitish dusty looking babies crawl out from under the shell and look for a nice leaf to attach to. These are the crawlers. In large quantities they could be mistaken for mealie bugs. Gene "Diana Kulaga" wrote in message ... Gene & Rob, I have a question for both of you. Thankfully, scale is generally not a huge problem for me. I see it now and then, but seldom, really. And I have never seen anything that I could identify as crawling scale. When I *have* had scale, it appears attached to the plant, having sunk its wicked fangs in already. Thorough searches have not produced anything further. Am I missing something? Diana "Rob" wrote in message ... Gene Schurg wrote: Rob, It is interesting that you could be observing the same thing as I. Did you spray or drench with the Bayer product? Did you water between applications where the plants could suck up water without the chemicals? I tried a drench (trash can and pump with hose) with just the bayer for three consecutive weeks in early summer. That didn't work, or at least not completely. When I added the IGR into the mix, it was applied as a spray to the point of complete saturation of as much leaf surface as possible (top and bottom), again for three consecutive weeks, within a couple hours after watering the greenhouse in my normal way. I'm not sure of the rationale of that, but I did have one. It made sense to water before so that I wouldn't wash out chemical before it had a chance to be absorbed, and I thought that perhaps the leaves would be more actively transpiring right after a nice watering and more susceptible to absorbing chemical. Distance is supposed to have translaminar systemic activity (absorbed through the leaves), which is one of the reasons I picked it. I don't think EnstarII is systemic (I could be wrong). It is about the same cost, but you have to buy a whole quart... They target the same pathway. And actually, come to think of it, I used orthene instead of imidocloprid for the first two weeks. Both have systemic activity. I was worried that the bugs were becoming resistant to repeated imidocloprid treatment, and I hadn't used orthene in a while. This way I was hoping to get the resistant ones in the first two passes, and get the longer residual of the imidocloprid on the last one. And orthene is cheap... Probably a stupid idea. -- Rob's Rules: http://littlefrogfarm.com 1) There is always room for one more orchid 2) There is always room for two more orchids 2a) See rule 1 3) When one has insufficient credit to obtain more orchids, obtain more credit |
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