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#1
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What's eating my courgettes?
-- Chris |
#2
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What's eating my courgettes?
CT wrote:
....nothing! Oops. Most of my courgettes are getting eaten by something. I wondered if it was birds but I expected some of the others to maybe have some beak marks. The flowers are left on the ground and the fruit has just completely gone. I've covered them with some fleece so I'm hoping that more will grow and I will be able to eat some of them myself! -- Chris |
#3
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What's eating my courgettes?
"CT" wrote ...
CT wrote: ...nothing! Oops. Most of my courgettes are getting eaten by something. I wondered if it was birds but I expected some of the others to maybe have some beak marks. The flowers are left on the ground and the fruit has just completely gone. I've covered them with some fleece so I'm hoping that more will grow and I will be able to eat some of them myself! Are you certain there was fruit there? I say that as usually the first flowers on any cucurbit are male. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#4
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What's eating my courgettes?
Bob Hobden wrote:
Are you certain there was fruit there? I say that as usually the first flowers on any cucurbit are male. There is some fruit that's OK but there was what looked like a half-eaten courgette the other day that has now gone completely. There also appears to be various other damage (e.g. chunks out, snapped off) to a few of the stems and I saw a Blackbird close-by earlier today, so I checked all the plants over. It shouldn't be an issue now anyway because of the fleece so I was just wondering if they were seen as a juicy snack for the birds or something else. Of course, I'm pretty new to this gardening lark and this is the first year that I've grown veg (apart from toms & potatoes) so it's all a bit of a learning curve. -- Chris |
#5
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What's eating my courgettes?
On 03/07/2012 16:34, CT wrote:
Bob Hobden wrote: Are you certain there was fruit there? I say that as usually the first flowers on any cucurbit are male. There is some fruit that's OK but there was what looked like a half-eaten courgette the other day that has now gone completely. There also appears to be various other damage (e.g. chunks out, snapped off) to a few of the stems and I saw a Blackbird close-by earlier today, so I checked all the plants over. It shouldn't be an issue now anyway because of the fleece so I was just wondering if they were seen as a juicy snack for the birds or something else. Of course, I'm pretty new to this gardening lark and this is the first year that I've grown veg (apart from toms & potatoes) so it's all a bit of a learning curve. I've grown courgettes for a number of years and never had them eaten, I cannot think of anything that would. Having said that if it stops raining and I go out into the garden I bet mine will have been attacked as well, sods law. -- Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire |
#6
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What's eating my courgettes?
On 04/07/2012 12:32, Moonraker wrote:
On 03/07/2012 16:34, CT wrote: Bob Hobden wrote: Are you certain there was fruit there? I say that as usually the first flowers on any cucurbit are male. There is some fruit that's OK but there was what looked like a half-eaten courgette the other day that has now gone completely. There also appears to be various other damage (e.g. chunks out, snapped off) to a few of the stems and I saw a Blackbird close-by earlier today, so I checked all the plants over. It shouldn't be an issue now anyway because of the fleece so I was just wondering if they were seen as a juicy snack for the birds or something else. Of course, I'm pretty new to this gardening lark and this is the first year that I've grown veg (apart from toms & potatoes) so it's all a bit of a learning curve. I've grown courgettes for a number of years and never had them eaten, I cannot think of anything that would. Having said that if it stops raining and I go out into the garden I bet mine will have been attacked as well, sods law. IU've had them pecked by birds and eaten by slugs. |
#7
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What's eating my courgettes?
Moonraker wrote:
I've grown courgettes for a number of years and never had them eaten, I cannot think of anything that would. Having said that if it stops raining and I go out into the garden I bet mine will have been attacked as well, sods law. I've definitely had slug + snail damage to them before. I appear to have accidentally* planted a large courgette pot in a flowering planter bed this year, and it's started to fruit. Probably a bit risky to try and move it now * I had it in a pot ont he decking and needed to clear the decking, and there was a big gap in the planter, so I put it in the gap meaning to remove it later, then it rained lots and it kind of bedded in, pot and all .... |
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