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#1
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Plague of flower beetles
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of
little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, -- Martin Brown |
#2
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Plague of flower beetles
On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown
wrote: The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. Bit of a bummer if you want cut flowers for the house, I suppose! Regards, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{whoisat}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
#3
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, Apparently, they are prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again, although now its gone to seed). |
#4
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, They are particularly prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again although now maybe it's gone to seed, they're descending on your garden). We've had them as well intermittently. |
#5
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Plague of flower beetles
In message , Stephen Howard
writes On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown wrote: Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. This is in an entirely different league. I am talking about so many pollen beetles on most yellow flowers (and objects) that it is almost impossible to tell their true colour. It looks more like something off a sci-fi movie. (Same sort of density as you get with bad aphid infestation on soft plant stems) Some are on orange flowers and white washing as well. As Magwitch has pointed out in another posting they are associated with oilseed rape - and guess what the local landowner is harvesting at the moment (at least when it is dry enough to put tractors on the land). Evidently the beetles stay on the rape long after the flowers have gone. Harvesting would appear to displace them in plague quantities. I guess we were unlucky enough to be downwind of them this year. At the moment it is cold and raining hard so things are a bit quieter. Regards, -- Martin Brown |
#6
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, Apparently, they are prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again, although now its gone to seed). |
#7
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, They are particularly prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again although now maybe it's gone to seed, they're descending on your garden). We've had them as well intermittently. |
#8
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Plague of flower beetles
In message , Stephen Howard
writes On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown wrote: Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. This is in an entirely different league. I am talking about so many pollen beetles on most yellow flowers (and objects) that it is almost impossible to tell their true colour. It looks more like something off a sci-fi movie. (Same sort of density as you get with bad aphid infestation on soft plant stems) Some are on orange flowers and white washing as well. As Magwitch has pointed out in another posting they are associated with oilseed rape - and guess what the local landowner is harvesting at the moment (at least when it is dry enough to put tractors on the land). Evidently the beetles stay on the rape long after the flowers have gone. Harvesting would appear to displace them in plague quantities. I guess we were unlucky enough to be downwind of them this year. At the moment it is cold and raining hard so things are a bit quieter. Regards, -- Martin Brown |
#9
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Plague of flower beetles
"Martin Brown" wrote in message ... In message , Stephen Howard writes On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown wrote: Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. This is in an entirely different league. I am talking about so many pollen beetles on most yellow flowers (and objects) that it is almost impossible to tell their true colour. It looks more like something off a sci-fi movie. (Same sort of density as you get with bad aphid infestation on soft plant stems) Some are on orange flowers and white washing as well. As Magwitch has pointed out in another posting they are associated with oilseed rape - and guess what the local landowner is harvesting at the moment (at least when it is dry enough to put tractors on the land). Evidently the beetles stay on the rape long after the flowers have gone. Harvesting would appear to displace them in plague quantities. I guess we were unlucky enough to be downwind of them this year. At the moment it is cold and raining hard so things are a bit quieter. Regards, -- Martin Brown *********** Ah!, - you mention Magwich!. Lovely memories of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations." In the film Sir John Mills the famous actor plays as a boy who is suddenly confronted by Magwich (who has escaped from a prison hulk in the Medway river), at a graveyard gravestone near Rainham. (I've been there.) The boy goes for food for M. but M is captured and depor ted. He sponsors the boy in secret and, having made good, M comes back but is pursued and recaptured. He happened to have had a daughter, (played by Valerie Hobson), who looked after Miss Faversham, a recluse. The boy meets the girl at the recluse's house. The boy is later an educated man and goes to see Magwich on his deathbed in a sleazy prison, he tells Magwich he is in love with a wonderful girl and tells him about her. Magwich realises she is *his* daughter, and dies peacefully, comforted in the arms of the man he has sponsored and educated. And everyone in tears including me. They don't write 'em like that any more. I consider that book to the finest ever and second only to "Gone with the Wind" , (and I've been to Atlanta too and photographed the Authoress' grave.) Doug. *********** |
#10
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, Apparently, they are prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again, although now its gone to seed). |
#11
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Plague of flower beetles
Martin Brown muttered:
The last couple of weeks has seen a huge increase in the numbers of little black flower (pollen?) beetles. Now reaching a stage where anything in the garden that is yellow quickly becomes coated in a writhing mass of black beetles. Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Even seemingly inert yellow objects like my neighbours "marigold" yellow rubber kitchen gloves get coated. Marigolds are just about the only yellow flower in the garden that is not submerged under a layer of black beetles. I made the mistake last week of walking outside in a yellow sweat shirt and was instantly plastered in the things too. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? Flowers are a bit thin on the ground at the moment after a cool damp fortnight. Does anything bother to eat them? I don't remember having this problem last year. Regards, They are particularly prevalent around fields of oil-seed rape (yellow flowers again although now maybe it's gone to seed, they're descending on your garden). We've had them as well intermittently. |
#12
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Plague of flower beetles
In message , Stephen Howard
writes On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown wrote: Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. This is in an entirely different league. I am talking about so many pollen beetles on most yellow flowers (and objects) that it is almost impossible to tell their true colour. It looks more like something off a sci-fi movie. (Same sort of density as you get with bad aphid infestation on soft plant stems) Some are on orange flowers and white washing as well. As Magwitch has pointed out in another posting they are associated with oilseed rape - and guess what the local landowner is harvesting at the moment (at least when it is dry enough to put tractors on the land). Evidently the beetles stay on the rape long after the flowers have gone. Harvesting would appear to displace them in plague quantities. I guess we were unlucky enough to be downwind of them this year. At the moment it is cold and raining hard so things are a bit quieter. Regards, -- Martin Brown |
#13
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Plague of flower beetles
"Martin Brown" wrote in message ... In message , Stephen Howard writes On Fri, 16 Jul 2004 12:54:39 +0100, Martin Brown wrote: Courgette flowers are particularly badly affected. Any ideas what makes them appear in such huge numbers all of a sudden? I don't remember having this problem last year. Are they that much of a problem then? I rather like the contrast of shiny little black dots against the flowers - and I've always assumed they're part of the pollination process. This is in an entirely different league. I am talking about so many pollen beetles on most yellow flowers (and objects) that it is almost impossible to tell their true colour. It looks more like something off a sci-fi movie. (Same sort of density as you get with bad aphid infestation on soft plant stems) Some are on orange flowers and white washing as well. As Magwitch has pointed out in another posting they are associated with oilseed rape - and guess what the local landowner is harvesting at the moment (at least when it is dry enough to put tractors on the land). Evidently the beetles stay on the rape long after the flowers have gone. Harvesting would appear to displace them in plague quantities. I guess we were unlucky enough to be downwind of them this year. At the moment it is cold and raining hard so things are a bit quieter. Regards, -- Martin Brown *********** Ah!, - you mention Magwich!. Lovely memories of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations." In the film Sir John Mills the famous actor plays as a boy who is suddenly confronted by Magwich (who has escaped from a prison hulk in the Medway river), at a graveyard gravestone near Rainham. (I've been there.) The boy goes for food for M. but M is captured and depor ted. He sponsors the boy in secret and, having made good, M comes back but is pursued and recaptured. He happened to have had a daughter, (played by Valerie Hobson), who looked after Miss Faversham, a recluse. The boy meets the girl at the recluse's house. The boy is later an educated man and goes to see Magwich on his deathbed in a sleazy prison, he tells Magwich he is in love with a wonderful girl and tells him about her. Magwich realises she is *his* daughter, and dies peacefully, comforted in the arms of the man he has sponsored and educated. And everyone in tears including me. They don't write 'em like that any more. I consider that book to the finest ever and second only to "Gone with the Wind" , (and I've been to Atlanta too and photographed the Authoress' grave.) Doug. *********** |
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