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Worms in my pears. Pear midge
About a year ago I asked about Worms in my pears in:
http://groups.google.com/group/uk.re...a59d3da0b8de42 The diagnose was Pear midge. I tried to catch the falling pears in a net. But it was of no use since most of the maggots had already left the pears. I also covered up the ground and found a significant number of maggots dead on the cover. Unfortunately I got some heavy rain so some of the maggots was flushed of the cover. In addition to this I covered the ground in the spring, if it made any difference I don't know. All this seemed to make a difference, the ratio affected to unaffected pears was significantly lower this year. But unfortunately, we had bad pollination this spring so the number of unaffected pears are low too. I did no see a single bee in the tree this spring, just some bumblebees, I think I have to find a beekeeper and ask him to move some hives to our neighbourhood. John Rehn |
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Worms in my pears. Pear midge
On Jul 10, 9:31 am, Charlie Pridham
wrote: In article d39d13cc-1b96-4f85-93f8- , says... About a year ago I asked about Worms in my pears in: http://groups.google.com/group/uk.re...a59d3da0b8de42 The diagnose wasPearmidge. I tried to catch the falling pears in a net. But it was of no use since most of the maggots had already left the pears. I also covered up the ground and found a significant number of maggots dead on the cover. Unfortunately I got some heavy rain so some of the maggots was flushed of the cover. In addition to this I covered the ground in the spring, if it made any difference I don't know. All this seemed to make a difference, the ratio affected to unaffected pears was significantly lower this year. But unfortunately, we had bad pollination this spring so the number of unaffected pears are low too. I did no see a single bee in the tree this spring, just some bumblebees, I think I have to find a beekeeper and ask him to move some hives to our neighbourhood. John Rehn Thanks for the update, we have suffered for years on onepeartree but not the other, timing it seems is all. -- Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwallwww.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and Lapageria rosea I think the best method is to cut the grass below the tree short. Cover the ground with something that let the rain and the light through so that the grass don't suffer, and to minimize the possibility that the maggots will be flushed of the cover. Maybe some old bed sheets might do. Trying to catch the falling pearlets I think is of no use. About the timing. How do the midgets "know" when the right( wrong) time is due. Temperature in the ground ?? or ?? Maybe it is possible to fool the midgets to emerge at the wrong time. Either by covering the ground with transparent plastic to create a "greenhouse" and make the ground warmer, or by covering the ground with old leaves or similar to make i colder. Wdus ? |
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