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Pest Control

One of the questions that comes up most often is how to deal with pests. Aphids, for example.

If you get your soil right, you’ve got a good chance of avoiding them altogether. Plants have their own defence systems, and with the right nutrition, just like humans they can fend off a good proportion of threats. Aphids (and mites and lots of other pests) like sappy, fast-growing, tender green shoots with thin cell walls and high sugar content, which is what you tend to get with too much nitrogen and not enough potassium or micronutrients. Avoiding soluble fertilizers or too much animal manure, and using compost made with a good variety of ingredients, and the occasional boost with seaweed brew, makes plants much less attractive to sap suckers or leaf eaters.

But some seasons, you don’t get it right or it’s not enough and your beautiful broccolini, just about ready to harvest, gets infested.

Conventional gardeners hunt the little beasts with some very toxic chemicals.  The smart ones are bundled up in spacesuits, the ones whose genes are being naturally selected for elimination are in thongs and t-shirts. It’s not very comfortable, ethical or fun, but it’s fast, effective, and if the brew used is nasty enough, it lasts for several weeks. 

Organic gardeners meticulously wash the little creatures off their plants with soapy water.  They get vegetables that don’t light up in the dark, but it’s slow, tedious, and just about a full-time job. It’s what gets food gardening a bad reputation for taking more than it gives.

Permaculturists count their lucky stars and build a pond quickly while the opportunity lasts. They may have to write off some of this spring’s crop as bait.  But by summer they’ll be sitting on the verandah with a beer, listening to a frog with a belly full of aphids inviting another frog to make the next  generation of aphid hunters. Aphids are juicy, high protein, slow, and prolific.  For a hungry frog in an amorous mood they are just about the best attractant you can get.

So, you have the first essential already – bait to attract pest predators. How do you capitalise on the opportunity?

Second essential, you avoid killing off the potential parents of your pest control troops by never using “icides” of any kind in the garden. Aphids, like many pests, are well adapted to this kind of warfare.  Their population will recover from a pesticide attack much more quickly than the population of their natural predators. Because their skins are so permeable, frogs are one of the most susceptible species of all. Even soap, detergent, or the surfactant in some organic pesticides will kill them.  Beware of killing your allies with friendly fire.

Thirdly, you provide them with the other essentials they need to breed up.  For frogs, it’s a pond (even a tiny one). For other pest predators – lizards, birds, dragonflies, predatory mites – there’s a whole range of simple strategies to make a garden an attractive home to them – hiding spots, perching spots, nesting spots, accessible water, nectar sources, warm and cool places to hang out. Often a very small intervention will make a big difference – one or two dill plants flowering, a shallow dish of water with a rock in it, a few bushy perennials.

You are not a very effective insect hunter.  You are big, clumsy, noisy, and slow.  Your eyesight is not good enough, your tongue is not long enough, and your brain gets bored so easily that it is a handicap.  There are other creatures that are much better adapted for the job.  Doing some enterprise bargaining with them is one of the best bits of garden work you can do.

So, this is an archive of posts about pest control in my garden. I hope it will give you some ideas and strategies. I’d love to hear your ideas.  

  • Home Improvement

    Home Improvement

    Last year, this was my water chestnut pond. And it worked so well. In this little suburban garden I have so little space that everything has to be miniature, but the discipline of making every centimetre count has been an epiphany. Water chestnuts in one side, kang kong in the other, and as much of…

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  • Garden Pharmacy – Feverfew

    Garden Pharmacy – Feverfew

    Feverfew is a pretty little perennial herb with flowers that look very much like chamomile. It’s is best known as a migraine preventative, and there is now some decent evidence that it works and is safe. Luckily I don’t get migraines. But there is also some evidence that it is useful as an antihistamine, and…

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  • Snacking on Aphids

    Snacking on Aphids

    The question I see come up more often than any other in garden forums is how to deal with pests. And I get it. Watching the aphids arrive right when your beautiful broccolini get to the stage where you don’t know if you want to eat it or photograph it is hard, especially in a…

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  • Mosquito Control

    Mosquito Control

    Striped Marsh Frogs moved in of their own accord. They don’t mind urban environments except that, like all frogs, they are highly sensitive to RoundUp ®. Use RoundUp to get rid of your bindii-eyes or lantana, and you end up having to use insecticide on your skin to ward off mosquitoes. And then snail bait.…

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  • White Cabbage Moths

    White Cabbage Moths

    It’s spring. The white cabbage moths have arrived, en masse. But they don’t seem to be doing much damage. So here are some of my speculations about why.

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  • Nature red in tooth and claw

    Nature red in tooth and claw

    My broad beans have aphids. Judging by my social media, everyone else’s broadbeans have aphids too. The trigger with little insects stealing my food is they must die! But must they? Most of the ways of waging war on aphids involve either pollutants or a lot of effort. Is there something easier?

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  • The cavalry have arrived

    The cavalry have arrived

    Aphids have discovered my broad beans. Best way I’ve discovered yet to deal with them is to tap the broad bean tip onto the palm of my hand, which gives me a handful of aphids easy to squash (and a handful of squashed aphids).

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  • Soil Building Part 2 – Seaweed brew

    Soil Building Part 2 – Seaweed brew

    Chooks and worms do the bulk of my soil building, but compost can only contain the micronutrients of the ingredients that go into it. Using some ingredients from trees that deep mine subsoil, and some weeds that are dynamic accumulators helps, but the hero for micronutrients is seaweed, and the best way I’ve (yet) discovered…

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  • Lizards and Slugs

    Lizards and Slugs

    Usually I leave the slugs to the bluetongue. I’d hate to starve him (or her) into deciding to live somewhere else. But he’s a bit too well fed, and I’m not. A cup with an inch of beer, buried so the rim is at the soil surface, overnight collected all these. The chooks will feast…

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  • Wildlife That Bites

    Wildlife That Bites

    It’s a great year for mozzies. This week they seem to have all metamorphosed from wrigglers at once, and for the first time we have had to start putting the mosquito net over our bed down of a night. Up until now, the control measures for mozzies have consisted of what we don’t do.

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  • The Bucket and the Basket

    The Bucket and the Basket

    Most times I do my picking walk first thing in the morning before breakfast. It usually takes about half an hour, and its the most productive garden work I do. I walk with a bucket and a basket.

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  • Fruit Fly

    Fruit Fly

    I live smack bang in fruit fly territory. Bactrocera tryoni – Queensland Fruit Fly. They seem to be getting, if anything more prolific as the climate heats up, and I think over the years I’ve tried every known method of control, short of spraying, which I can tell without trying it wouldn’t work.

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  • 28 Spotted Ladybeetle

    28 Spotted Ladybeetle

    It’s such a good disguise. It looks just like a ladybeetle. If I didn’t catch it actually in flagrante eating the leaves on my squash, I would think it was a good guy.

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  • Lizard Eggs

    Lizard Eggs

    Aren’t they cute? I found them when I was recycling potting mix from some seedlings that I didn’t need to plant out. There are two different kinds. I think the larger ones might be land mullet eggs, and the smaller ones the little skinks I find in the shadehouse and garden.

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  • Feeding the Chooks and the Chooks Feeding Us

    Feeding the Chooks and the Chooks Feeding Us

    Chooks are such a good way to double the harvest. These bok choy were self sown and if I’d been pressed for space I would have fed them to the chooks as greens much earlier. We ate a few leaves, but then since I had nothing desperately needing the spot I let them go to…

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  • Microbats and Flying Foxes

    Microbats and Flying Foxes

    I hung the quilts out to air on the verandah clothes line, forgot about them for just a couple of days, and when I went to bring them in, a pair of microbats had decided that hanging upside down inside the folds was a perfect place for a nap.

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  • Cobwebs

    Cobwebs

    I wonder if you can see this? It was stunning to see but hard to photograph.  This is looking from my verandah down at the gum trees in the early morning light, and they are covered in cobwebs!  Hundreds of them.  There’s a major convention of spiders happening at our place. And we have no…

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  • Hubble Bubble

    Hubble Bubble

    If I can get the micronutrient level nice and high and balanced early enough, I will give the garden plants enough immunity and the predators enough of a head start to avoid most of the spring and summer bugs.

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  • A Garden With Stamina

    A Garden With Stamina

    I haven’t written a post about gardening for a while, so I thought I should write one about not gardening. At the moment, I feel…

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