Welcome to Liza's Garden

 






Home Gardening Article

Dealing with Garden Pests

While tending to my own garden, I have found that one of the most frustrating things that can happen to a gardener is to walk outside to check on your plants. Its just a routine walk to make sure that your garden is thriving, but you end up finding holes in all of your plants that looked fine only hours before. The explanations for some of these plant-destroying holes are garden pests. Some of the main garden pests are slugs, worms, caterpillars, birds, snails, and the occasional gopher. Although you can never wipe out these pests entirely, after all your hard work in the garden you have to do something.

Insects are one of the worst things to have in your garden; they can live under the soil, in old weeds or piles of leaves, or in a number of other places. In order to help keep insects away, always try and eliminate places in your garden and near your garden that these insects and other plant diseases could be living. Remove old leaves, weeds, or any other decaying matter that insects and diseases could be living in from your yard. Also, regularly turn over your garden soil and break apart any clumps of dirt so that you can eliminate the living spaces any insects that might be hiding underground.

Another way to rid your garden of the pests is to use dormant spray, which is used to keep destructive insects and diseases under control. It is best that you use dormant spray when your plants are dormant, usually around February or early March. I have used dormant spray many times on my garden and it has worked wonders on keeping insects out. But as I learned from experience, dormant spray is only effective if you follow the correct instructions. When I first decided to use some on my garden, I just dumped it everywhere in hopes of killing everything harmful. Unfortunately I ended up killing my entire garden along with my neighbors. Some insects can be beneficial to your garden though, so be sure to find out which insects help your garden.

Another pest problem I've had besides insects has been birds. Whenever I see birds in my garden I run outside a chase them away, but as soon as I step inside they come right back. The solution that I've come up with to keep the birds away from my garden is to put a bird feeder in my yard. Instead of costing me time and money by eating my garden, the birds eat at the bird feeder. In the long run itll save you money. Not only can a bird feeder help keep birds away from your garden, but they can also be a new part of your yard decoration. Although not completely eliminating my bird problem, my bird feeder has made the problem smaller. Getting a dog has also helped.

If you start seeing mounds of dirt around your yard, and your plants keep unexplainably dieing, you can assume that you have a gopher problem.  Thankfully, this is one of the few garden pasts that I haven't had. However my friend has struggled with a tremendous gopher infestation, so I decided to research it. Gophers are rodents that are five to fourteen inches long. Their fur can be black, light brown, or white, and they have small tails. One method of getting rid of these root-eating pests is to set traps. The key to successfully capturing a gopher using a trap is to successfully locate the gopher's tunnels and set the trap correctly. Another way to get rid of them is to use smoke bombs, which you place into the tunnel and the smoke spreads through out it and hopefully reaches the gopher.

If you suspect that your gardens are being pillaged by any of the pests I mentioned, I encourage you to try your hardest to eliminate the problem as soon as possible. The longer you let the species stay, the more established it will become.

 


Liza's Garden Recommended Products


Liza's Garden News and Information


 



Home Gardening News

Test and Keep Free Gardening Products - Colleyville Courier

Join the National Home Gardening Club.Test & keep gardening products. Get 53 issues for just $31. Save 85% off the cover price. Subscribe today and try your subscription risk-free for 90 days. Fast delivery of your first issue. Gift subscriptions ...

Read more...


YARD OF THE WEEK: Adams family believes in child-friendly gardening - Appalachian News-Express

VIRGIE — This edition of “Yard of the Week” takes us into one of the farther reaches of the county. Jokingly, I told someone from the area later that I drove to the end of the Earth. Their reply was that I went seven miles beyond the end of the ...

Read more...


Fall Swim Lessons - Birmingham News

Location Alabaster Alexander City Alpharetta Anniston Atlanta Bessemer Birmingham Brownsboro Calera Center Point Chelsea Collegeville Crestline Cullman Decatur Ensley Enterprise Fairfield Fairhope Florence Forest Park Fultondale Gadsden Gardendale ...

Read more...


DVD, book offer basics of butterfly husbandry - Dallas Morning News

home@dallasnews.com Bill Scheick is a garden writer and professor of American literature and culture at the University of Texas at Austin. Winston Churchill loved butterflies and thought he could easily move a bunch of these winged creatures to his ...

Read more...


Room Outside: Blooms for a balcony - Independent

I live in an apartment and have a large balcony with a table and chairs and a few pot plants. I rarely get a chance to water them and I am away a lot with work, so they keep dying. Can you advise me on more low maintenance plants? My balcony is south ...

Read more...


Higher food prices fuel interest in edible landscaping - Medford Mail Tribune

More than a century ago, a plant breeder and seed merchant named W. Atlee Burpee bought Fordhook Farm in Doylestown, Pa., and developed varieties of vegetables for the home gardener. Today, the enterprise continues in the same soil under W. Atlee ...

Read more...




Home
National Home Gardening Club Articles and Resources
Water Gardening Links
Sitemap

Home Gardening Navigation

Gardening Gift
General Gardening
Raised Bed Gardening
Gardening In Texas
Gardening Book
Rose Gardening
Googlebot
Get Gardening Advice
Bbc.co.uk Gardening
Canadian Gardening
Gardening Australia
Organic Gardening Magazine
Vegetable Gardening
Gardening Software
Gardening Seed
 

can't get data from Amazon.