Squash Bug Organic
Squash Bug Organic

Greenhouse Bean Feast 5 Bug Eat Bug
I don’t know about you, but I do object when something uninvited gatecrashes my greenhouse and starts to eat my plants. I love sharing fresh, home-grown produce with others, but others of my choice. It wouldn’t be quite so bad if they simply ate a leaf or two, but more often than not they distort and disfigure the plants so that they can’t grow to their full potential and this affects the yield. The Greenhouse Bean Feast is not an open invitation to help yourself.
But I have a problem, I’ve never been good at killing anything, even bugs and slugs, and though that may be a shock to many gardeners, I do believe that everything has its place in the food chain and the greater cycle of life. So when the bugs invade I don’t reach for the chemicals. Pesticides aren’t clever enough to know that I don’t want the aphids but I do want the hoverflies, the bees and the lacewings. Pesticides destroy many beneficial creatures that get in their path and they also deprive other creatures of a meal. In the garden a plague of aphids provides a healthy meal for long tailed tits, ladybirds and hoverfly larvae. It’s a little different in the glasshouse because this is a manmade environment where nature is not in complete balance, I have created an artificial environment where many pests can thrive and prosper without their natural predators. Of course I leave the windows open for easy access to all creatures at this time of year, but the balance can and sometimes does, become a little lopsided. After a couple of flower shows, with the plants dependent on self watering systems to keep them watered and a spell of cold weather, the compost got too wet. Fungus flies have a field day. Then the arrival of some unexpected plants just before Chelsea, bearing some uninvited guests and very soon, in my absence a little colony of aphids has built up too.
So now the battle lines are drawn and as always I have my favourite secret weapon to hand. A quick call to Green Gardener, a family run business that supplies biological control mail order, is the simplest, kindest and fastest way to remove these gatecrashers from my precious plants and my private greenhouse. I can’t recommend their dawn to dusk help line enough and have lost count of the rescue remedies they have speedily despatched to my greenhouse in need over the years. And so, in response to the latest message of distress, arrives neat packages of bug busting agents. All naturally occurring, all organic and all effective and speedy too, but the best thing is that these critters do the work for me, I don’t have to spray, squash or murder anything, instead these bugs do it for me. I suppose some might say that’s like hiring an assassin, but I don’t agree, all I have done is restored a little of the natural balance by introduing predators that exist naturally outside the grrenhouse into this protected environment. It’s a great lesson for beginners and children. In the natural world, for every problem there is a solution, for every pest there is a predator and for every creature there is a meal. By choosing to introduce natural predators you increase the populations of these beneficial creatures and provide them with a food source, a safe habitat with shelter and the right conditions to breed. For gardeners this is a win win scenario. For the dratted fungus flies a sprinkling of Hypoaspis onto the affected compost quickly deals with the problem by eating the fly larvae. For the aphids a two pronged attack is planned and dispatched: introduce two biological controls, Aphidoletes and Aphidius. Aphidoletes is used for large aphid colonies on a few plants. It’s is a naturally occurring midge, the larvae of which feed on a large number of aphid species. Aphidius is used for small numbers of aphids spread over a number of plants. Aphidius is a naturally occurring aphid parasite and it is capable of attacking over 40 aphid species. Special mixed packs are available.
Greenhouse gardeners all over the UK should know about Green Gardener (www.greengardener.co.uk; 01603 715096), they offer a safe and effective way to keep glasshouses free of problem pests. They are real gardeners that have the answers to your greenhouse and garden pest issues and they care about the planet.
how to control squash vine borer?
we r planing to plant a hybrid pumpkin, but the Package says it will attract borer.
will the bug infestation spreed to the rest of the garden?
the package says to use pyola to fix problem, this is an organic garden and don’t want to use pesticides? what r some Other options.
there is a lot to read here, but it is very helpful and informative
http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/horticulture/M1209.html
squash bugs
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Safer Brand 5118 Insect Killing Soap – 16-Ounce Concentrate $8.01 5118 Features: -Houseplant insect killing soap.-Environmentally friendly.-Use on houseplants, ornamental foliage plants, flowering plants, fruits and vegetables.-Kills aphids, mealy bugs, spider mites and whiteflies.-Does not harm beneficial insects.-Can be used up to day of harvest.-24 Ounce size…. |
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Safer Brand 5160 Caterpillar Killer with BT – 8-Ounce Concentrate $8.05 Contains a biological insecticide (Bacillus Thuringiensis) for controlling tent caterpillars, gypsy moths, tomato hornworms and other leaf eating caterpillars on trees, shrubs and vegetables. Is natural and biodegradable and spares beneficial insects. Use… |
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Safer Brand 5110 Insect Killing Soap – 32-Ounce Spray $4.94 Concentrated insect killing soap. Use on houseplants, ornamental foliage plants, flowering plants, fruits, and vegetables. Kills aphids, mealy bugs, spider mites, and whiteflies. Does not kill beneficial insects such as ladybugs, praying mantis, and others, when used as directed. Insecticidal soap dries out the waxy outer skin of insects. Can be used up to the day of harvest. 1/2 gallon bottle mak… |
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Organic control of squash vine borer (Current topic) … |
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Monterey Garden Insect Spray (Spinosad) Produced by fermentation, Spinosad can be used on outdoor ornamentals, lawns, vegetables and fruit trees, to control caterpillars, thrips…… |

