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I really like what you are doing with your gardens, can also sympathise with you regarding the bugs.We have bugs here I have never even dreamed of, and more turn up each year.
Dianthus minutiflorus, a native of the Pirin Mountains in SW Bulgaria.
Oh, dear, I really thought that it would be hard to surprise an Australian regards bugs, but it seems Canada is doing just that..... I never guessed!
I now know never to visit [eastern Canada] in June again- although it was worth it for the heat
Luc, the Silene kantzeensis is just over a year old (sown 16 March 2008 and planted out 20 May 2008). It has made a mat 30cm in diameter, but this is the first time I have grown it. I just had a look and all being well it has about 30 more buds scattered across the surface. I am not sure if they will all be open at once, or if there are clones that are better flowering than others. What was the source of yours? Mine was from seed I bought from Vojtech Holubec.
Quote from: Sinchets on May 07, 2009, 09:32:04 PMI now know never to visit [eastern Canada] in June again- although it was worth it for the heatCanada, esp. the more northern areas, has an amazing fauna of biting insects. Blackflies that bite a little hunk out of your skin and inject anti-coagulant so you end up dripping with blood. Horse- and deer flies that bite out considerably larger hunks and will persist in buzzing round and round and round you until they spot an opening in your defenses. No-see-ums, biting gnats so tiny you no see 'em, that emerge about dusk and devour you alive. And mosquitoes!Fortunately, where I am only mosquitoes are an issue (and that a minor one) in urban areas, though out in the bush no-see-ums and deerflies are fairly common.QuoteRoger - So we don't scare off visitors let it be known that most cities in Canada do not have these nasty rural bugs (aside from the outermost suburbs). Winnipeg, the mosquito capital is the one exception I can think of.I remember as a teen being caught in a traffic jam for 2 hours in Richmond, Virginia, 100F and very high humidity. No air conditioning and the vinyl seats were so hot we had to keep moving in the car so we didn't stick fast.johnw
Roger - So we don't scare off visitors let it be known that most cities in Canada do not have these nasty rural bugs (aside from the outermost suburbs). Winnipeg, the mosquito capital is the one exception I can think of.I remember as a teen being caught in a traffic jam for 2 hours in Richmond, Virginia, 100F and very high humidity. No air conditioning and the vinyl seats were so hot we had to keep moving in the car so we didn't stick fast.johnw