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#1
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Pill bugs
Just came in from the flower garden (9:30pm) where I was checking on my
Hostas. The pill bugs (rollie pollys) are eating them. Some folks say pill bugs don't eat alive plants, but they do!!!! There was at least 50 on one leaf, shoulder to shoulder mulching away. All 18 hostas are being eaten. I sprayed them with neem oil, hope it works. -- Sam Along the Grand Strand of Myrtle Beach SC |
#2
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Pill bugs
If the oil doesn't work, try 1/4 cup of dish soap in a quart or water
and spray the plants. Be advised this will kill a bee if you spray it directly. On Wed, 16 Apr 2003 21:41:45 -0400, "samuel l crowe" wrote: Just came in from the flower garden (9:30pm) where I was checking on my Hostas. The pill bugs (rollie pollys) are eating them. Some folks say pill bugs don't eat alive plants, but they do!!!! There was at least 50 on one leaf, shoulder to shoulder mulching away. All 18 hostas are being eaten. I sprayed them with neem oil, hope it works. |
#3
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Pill bugs
I have seen those sowbugs eat fresh plants many times.I have heard it is
their last ditch effort to get something to eat.They would rather eat decompsed material.Also some wood ashes sprinkled around the plants may keep them away. "samuel l crowe" wrote in message ... Just came in from the flower garden (9:30pm) where I was checking on my Hostas. The pill bugs (rollie pollys) are eating them. Some folks say pill bugs don't eat alive plants, but they do!!!! There was at least 50 on one leaf, shoulder to shoulder mulching away. All 18 hostas are being eaten. I sprayed them with neem oil, hope it works. -- Sam Along the Grand Strand of Myrtle Beach SC |
#4
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Pill bugs
In article , "observer"
wrote: I have seen those sowbugs eat fresh plants many times.I have heard it is their last ditch effort to get something to eat.They would rather eat decompsed material.Also some wood ashes sprinkled around the plants may keep them away. That's exactly it. If a garden (or greenhouse) is unusually tidy wood louses & pillbugs have no choice but to resort to living plant material in their diet, though their little digestive systems can digest mainly only decomposing matter. Also in gardens seriously imblanced (usually from non-organic practices & especially the use of pesticides) the garden will loose its healthy balance of predator-insects, scavenger-insects, & those which actually do attack healthy plants as their primary mission. Wood louses are almost impervious to insecticides (since they're not insects) & when they discover themselves to be practically the only little things left alive, they begin to expand their population like mad, & when running short of their preferred decaying matter as food, begin to fill other ecological niches that were vacated by vanished insects. At that point they become quite harmful especially to seedlings; then gardeners respond with even more insecticides & make things even worse. If anyone begins to notice their garden is seriously overpopulated with wood louses & centipedes, but damned few actual insects, the landscape is probably toxic from the plethora of unwholesome chemicals sold for garden uses. Sometimes it isn't the gardener's fault; there are landscapes toxified by industrial activity even if the industry that did it closed shop 20 years ago (there's a suburban area of Tacoma, quite near their zoo, where the soils are uniformly so toxic that the government recommends dusting children off before letting ones kids back in the house, as if that ever happens, & veggies cannot be grown there for eating -- woodlouses & centipedes & the occasional ground spider is about all one finds under boards & rocks), or there are small properties that cannot escape the over-use of pesticides & other chemicals by all the surrounding neighbors. As a general principle, when wood louses become harmful, it means something larger is wrong in the garden that has resulted in behavior unnatural for wood louses. I don't know if the wood ash method works, but it might. Woodlouses have gills & anything that intefers with their gills kills them, which is foremost a lack of moisture. I've used them to feed vivarium animals, & discovered that woodlouses can live for days in an aquarium completely submerged, crawling around on the surface of aquarium gravel as though they were themselves aquatic critters. Yet they don't last long in a desert terrarium unless they can find & squeeze into a damp spot. -paghat the ratgirl "samuel l crowe" wrote in message ... Just came in from the flower garden (9:30pm) where I was checking on my Hostas. The pill bugs (rollie pollys) are eating them. Some folks say pill bugs don't eat alive plants, but they do!!!! There was at least 50 on one leaf, shoulder to shoulder mulching away. All 18 hostas are being eaten. I sprayed them with neem oil, hope it works. -- Sam Along the Grand Strand of Myrtle Beach SC -- "Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher. "Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature. -from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers" See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/ |
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