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Eyebright 15-12-2004 12:40 AM

organic / cultural / bio-friendly pest + disease control
 
now that so many chemical solutions to garden p+d have disappeared from the shelves i'd be really interested to hear of any methods the group might share involving eco-friendly ways of dealing with outdoor plant problems.

Alan Gould 15-12-2004 05:48 AM

In article , Eyebright
writes

now that so many chemical solutions to garden p+d have disappeared from
the shelves i'd be really interested to hear of any methods the group
might share involving eco-friendly ways of dealing with outdoor plant
problems.

Which problems do you have in mind?
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.

Eyebright 15-12-2004 01:43 PM

oh...any really anything people have found which encourages natural preditors of pests or reduces likelyhood of disease..
for instance...never done this one but heard that hanging a bird feeder in winter up in a climbing rose has the effect that the birds waiting their turn to feed eat aphid eggs from the rose branches.

Alan Gould 15-12-2004 07:28 PM

In article , Eyebright
writes

oh...any really anything people have found which encourages natural
preditors of pests or reduces likelyhood of disease..
for instance...never done this one but heard that hanging a bird feeder
in winter up in a climbing rose has the effect that the birds waiting
their turn to feed eat aphid eggs from the rose branches.

That's one example of many. We control aphids outside and inside by the
use of nettle infusion as described in the urg FAQ at:
http://www.nugget.demon.co.uk/MetaFAQ/nettle.html

We also regularly practice crop rotation for disease prevention plus
organic composting, mulching and green manuring to provide organic plant
nutrition. We never have need of manufactured fertilisers, pesticides,
herbicides or fungicides.

Other methods of pest and disease control are available online from the
Chase/HDRA Organic Gardening catalogue at:
www.OrganicCatalogue.com [2005 printed edition now available free]
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.

Eyebright 15-12-2004 11:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alan Gould

thanks for the links Alan...bows before the HDRA...

gary 16-12-2004 09:31 AM

On 12/15/04 5:43 AM, in article ,
"Eyebright" wrote:

Alan Gould Wrote:
In article
, Eyebright
writes-

-
Which problems do you have in mind?
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.


oh...any really anything people have found which encourages natural
preditors of pests or reduces likelyhood of disease..
for instance...never done this one but heard that hanging a bird feeder
in winter up in a climbing rose has the effect that the birds waiting
their turn to feed eat aphid eggs from the rose branches.

Humm...hanging a bird feeder in a climbing rose...? It is probably worthy of
a try. It won't hurt and maybe it will work. I tried a similar thing.
I hung a bird feeder above my asparagus. Put enough feed in it to attract
the birds. I was hoping they would eat the asparagus beetles that were
running rampant in my asparagus plants. I noticed several birds in the
asparagus fronds eating something...not sure what. Maybe asparagus fronds?
But I'm thinking that at least some asparagus beetles were eaten. It is
interesting to note that birds will not eat 'all' the beetles...they leave
them to multiply...tomorrow's lunch! In some ways they are smarter than you
and I but then some things are hard to prove.
Have you seen the tiny 'helicopter' type wasps? As far as I know all wasps
are predators. The tiny ones eat small 'bugs'. The bugs that eat plants. So
to answer your question of encouraging natural predators...have plants with
small flowers...the small flowers attract small wasps. They are the tiny
predators that eat tiny bugs. :)
Gary
Gary



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