Natural Solutions to Things That Bug You (38 page)

BOOK: Natural Solutions to Things That Bug You
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APPLE PEST PROBLEM SOLVER

              THE PROBLEM                                                                      CAUSED BY                                                       

Brown granular material around core

that may leak out holes                                                                      Codling moth

 

Leaves and blossoms tied up and eaten,

bronze-colored scars                                                                      Leafrollers

 

Leaves eaten in spring, small gouges                                          Western tussock moth

 

Irregular spots on upper side of leaves,

looks like blisters                                                                                    Tentiform leafminer

 

White cottony masses on woody areas of the

tree, warty growths on limbs and roots,

honeydew and black sooty mold                                          Woolly apple aphid

 

New leaves distorted and curled, honeydew                            Rosy apple aphid

 

New growth stunted, honeydew present and

black sooty mold on leaves and fruit                                          Green apple aphid

 

Pieces of apples missing                                                                      Birds and squirrels

WE NEED A GOOD BAND

One of the best controls is to band the tree. In the spring use strips of corrugated cardboard to tempt the larvae looking for a place spin their cocoon. Wrap the bands in several thicknesses then tie them on firmly. The exposed ridges should be facing toward the tree, if not; the larvae will not spin a cocoon. In warm weather you should remove the bands every 2 weeks and in cool weather about every 3 weeks, then remove and kill the larvae.

SANITATION WORKS GREAT!

In the fall if you clean up any fallen fruit and leaves, it will remove their winter home.

 

MAKE A TRAP

To prepare a trap, mix together 4½ cups of tap water, ½ cup of honey, ½ cup of molasses and 1 tablespoon of fresh yeast. Place the mixture into an empty plastic milk bottle and cut an entrance hole near the top. Run a piece of rope through the handle and hang it in a tree. It takes about two traps per mature tree. Be sure and empty them weekly and keep them up for about 2 months.

 

    You can also use a special pheromone to trap them that can be purchased at your local garden supply.

NOT ONLY FOR VAMPIRES

Spraying garlic is very useful in controlling the codling moth. The natural sulfur tends to repel them.

 

WASP THEM

Parasitic wasps are employed regularly to eliminate the codling moth larvae and pupae.

 

EUROPEAN APPLE SAWFLY

 

General Information:

The sawfly spends its winter under the soil as mature larvae in a cocoon and comes out in the spring as a fly. This is a brown and yellow bug with many transverse lines. It is somewhat larger than a common housefly and is active in the northeastern United States. The larvae live just under the skin of the fruit until they are about one-third grown and then bore into the fruit and do
extensive damage before entering the soil.

 

 

 

TRAP THOSE APPLE VARMENTS

Use white, sticky rectangular traps that can be purchased in most nurseries. This is the preferred method of elimination instead of poisons.

 

FLATHEAD APPLE BORER

 

General Information:

    This is a pest with a big appetite and will infest the following trees: apricot, cherry, boxelder, elm, hickory, chestnut, linden, oak, peach, plum, sycamore and willow. Their feeding tunnels will actually show through the bark in sunken areas. The larvae, is whitish-yellow and legless with several front body segments, which are wide and flat. They spend the winter in the fruit tunnels that they made.

 

The tunnels will eventually fill with a dry powder known as “frass,” which is composed of droppings and sawdust produced by their boring. The adults are dark bronze beetles that have a metallic sheen. The beetles come out in May and June and will relax on the sunny sides of the trees and lay their eggs in the crevices of the tree.

GET OUT THE BURLAP BAGS

Trees that have been transplanted and seedlings need to be protected with a wrapping of burlap or cardboard from the soil up to the lower branches.

PAINT THE TREES

You can apply a generous coating of white exterior latex paint to the tree trunk, protecting them from the bug.

 

ROUNDHEADED APPLE TREE BORER

 

General Information:

    This borer likes to tunnel deep into the trunk of the apple tree near the ground. Infestations will weaken a tree and can kill young trees. They will also eat both the leaves and the fruit. If you find brown castings above or just below the ground you know that they are active. If you do see the holes, snake a wire into the hole to kill them.

SUDS-A-WAY

If you use a thick wash of soap applied to the lower trunk of the tree it will discourage the beetles from laying their eggs.

 

CATCH THE DROPPINGS

One of the best methods of reducing the problem with these bugs is to remove any fruit that has dropped on the ground. Most of the time when fruit drops prematurely it is due to an infestation.

HIRE A HOG

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