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Cohan, I can send you ants, LOTS of them.I have what I think are carpenter ants, they are big black ants more than half an inch long.The new ones arrive in spring, fly in, drop their wings and make straight for any potplant.If you put the pots in a saucer with gravel and water to keep them out, they find a way to drop in from the top and dig their way down.They eat the roots of my clematis babies.GrrrrrrThese ants are weird, they don't seem to have a communal nest. Most I have seen is 3 in one pot.They also love to live in and under the cedar mulch.You are welcome to them, plus all the other ants I have.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on December 18, 2010, 09:43:08 PMQuote from: cohan on December 18, 2010, 06:02:36 AM they don't really bother the plants, but they eat our houses or anything made of wood....Well that's OK so long as they leave the plants alone. I wish the slugs did likewise! That's one of the few reasons I enjoy the cold weather: No slugs
Quote from: cohan on December 18, 2010, 06:02:36 AM they don't really bother the plants, but they eat our houses or anything made of wood....Well that's OK so long as they leave the plants alone.
they don't really bother the plants, but they eat our houses or anything made of wood....
Cohan, no hostas?I have zillions of slugs, HUGE ones. Birds don't touch them.Maybe a few chooks or ducks might, though.
cohan, we have the house ants destroying wood, but them simply enough to destroy.I start to think that problems with ants and slugs - are identical to gardeners of all countries! And my affairs not so are bad. And I so hoped that somewhere there live flower growers not having such difficulties... Hope is not true. Trond, you managed to photograph IT!Sorry to disappoint you! The pictures are from Wikimedia:http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fil:Bombus_wurfleini_tyvhumle.jpghttp://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liten_jordhumleBy the way, if you're talking about pests - tell me who can do such things with pods Corydalis?Do you mean something eat the seeds? Or suck sap from the immature pods?That I don't know!
Me too. And I have enough birds too but they seem to prefere other food, as you say. The huge ones are the least problem, they are easy to spot. It's the small ones that bother me. Seemingly all slugs want my dearest, smallest, most expensive, rarest plants. Why don't they feed on dandelions?Hoy, ( Trond?), I have been very successful at decimating the slug population with a squirt bottle 1 part ammonia to 10 parts water.You can squirt them and watch them dissolve, can also spray the hostas without fear of damage. Not sure about other plants though. Of course you only spray the plants before the sun gets on them.
Trond, yes, I wished to ask - somebody faced such damage of pods? I wish to know, who such does? Seeds partially lie on the earth, partially hang, seed boxes (pods?) are destroyed... Whether birds, whether insects - I can not understand.