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Old 29-07-2006, 01:26 AM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks
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Old 29-07-2006, 01:46 AM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

On Fri, 28 Jul 2006 19:26:56 -0500, Will wrote:

I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks


They are moths and why do you want to treat?
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Old 29-07-2006, 04:54 AM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone know
what they are and how to treat. Thanks


Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2 species
are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when traveling east or
south. None of which are of the "not" species.
--
Jonny


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Old 30-07-2006, 08:44 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone know
what they are and how to treat. Thanks


Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2 species
are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when traveling east or
south. None of which are of the "not" species.

I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is
not a wise ass.
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Old 31-07-2006, 03:39 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks


Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2
species are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when
traveling east or south. None of which are of the "not" species.

I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is not
a wise ass.


Don't get upset - the brevity of your OP practically *begged* for a wise
assed response. G

Moths themselves rarely... I'd be inclined to say never...do any damage -
although their larvae can be quite destructive. Is there a specific type of
damage that you think they're causing to your "not live oaks?" If so, maybe
you can describe it, thereby giving us a little bit more information.
--
Mike Harris
Austin, TX




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Old 01-08-2006, 12:24 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees


"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks


Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2
species are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when
traveling east or south. None of which are of the "not" species.

I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is not
a wise ass.


If a buttload ton of leaves fall almost all at once from this specific
species of oak in early spring and quickly grows new leaves, its a southern
live oak or closely related Texas live oak. Some refer to this as an
"evergreen", which its not. Either can be referred to as Live Oak.

If leaves turn bright bright red or orange in fall and sheds these leaves in
fall, most likely a Shumard Red Oak. Not to be confused with a Texas red
oak which frequents further west in the hill country proper. There are
hybrids of both that occur naturally. All can be referred to as Red Oak.

If neither fit the description, most likely planted there. Not native to
the area.
--
Jonny


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Old 01-08-2006, 08:46 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks
Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2
species are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when
traveling east or south. None of which are of the "not" species.

I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is not
a wise ass.


If a buttload ton of leaves fall almost all at once from this specific
species of oak in early spring and quickly grows new leaves, its a southern
live oak or closely related Texas live oak. Some refer to this as an
"evergreen", which its not. Either can be referred to as Live Oak.

If leaves turn bright bright red or orange in fall and sheds these leaves in
fall, most likely a Shumard Red Oak. Not to be confused with a Texas red
oak which frequents further west in the hill country proper. There are
hybrids of both that occur naturally. All can be referred to as Red Oak.

If neither fit the description, most likely planted there. Not native to
the area.

Its a Red oak and I have identified the moth as Gypsy Moths and have
discovered they are quite serious. Anyone know how to treat so they do
not return in the spring in a destructive stage. I have thousands of moths.
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Old 01-08-2006, 09:18 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks
Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2
species are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when
traveling east or south. None of which are of the "not" species.
I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is
not a wise ass.


If a buttload ton of leaves fall almost all at once from this specific
species of oak in early spring and quickly grows new leaves, its a
southern live oak or closely related Texas live oak. Some refer to this
as an "evergreen", which its not. Either can be referred to as Live Oak.

If leaves turn bright bright red or orange in fall and sheds these leaves
in fall, most likely a Shumard Red Oak. Not to be confused with a Texas
red oak which frequents further west in the hill country proper. There
are hybrids of both that occur naturally. All can be referred to as Red
Oak.

If neither fit the description, most likely planted there. Not native to
the area.

Its a Red oak and I have identified the moth as Gypsy Moths and have
discovered they are quite serious. Anyone know how to treat so they do not
return in the spring in a destructive stage. I have thousands of moths.


That is serious. Don't waste time writing us about the problem. This is no
time for half measures. Contact the Texas Department of Agriculture ASAP.
--
Mike Harris
Austin, TX


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Old 02-08-2006, 02:00 PM posted to austin.gardening
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Default Moths on Oak Trees

On Tue, 01 Aug 2006 14:46:47 -0500, Will wrote:

Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
Jonny wrote:
"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone
know what they are and how to treat. Thanks
Moths are furry flying insects.
Treat them like your in-laws with your wife present.
I couldn't find "not" live oaks anyplace. Must be a new species. 2
species are prevalent in the hill country. Another as well when
traveling east or south. None of which are of the "not" species.
I was unsure of the exact type of oak, is anyone able to help that is not
a wise ass.


If a buttload ton of leaves fall almost all at once from this specific
species of oak in early spring and quickly grows new leaves, its a southern
live oak or closely related Texas live oak. Some refer to this as an
"evergreen", which its not. Either can be referred to as Live Oak.

If leaves turn bright bright red or orange in fall and sheds these leaves in
fall, most likely a Shumard Red Oak. Not to be confused with a Texas red
oak which frequents further west in the hill country proper. There are
hybrids of both that occur naturally. All can be referred to as Red Oak.

If neither fit the description, most likely planted there. Not native to
the area.

Its a Red oak and I have identified the moth as Gypsy Moths and have
discovered they are quite serious. Anyone know how to treat so they do
not return in the spring in a destructive stage. I have thousands of moths.


Bacillus thurgiensis applied to the tree in spring when the worms are
out. They do not kill the tree. When they leave worm stage into
their cocoon new leaves grow. It's not quite serious, it's nature.
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Old 04-08-2006, 03:04 AM posted to austin.gardening
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Posts: 1
Default Moths on Oak Trees

They are butterflies.


"Will" wrote in message
...
I have moths, lots of them on my oak trees, not the live oaks. Anyone know
what they are and how to treat. Thanks





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