The Lodi Garden Club

The Lodi Garden Club The Club's objectives are to create, promote, and further interest in amateur gardening, in plant an bird life, and in the appreciation of natural beauty..

11/12/2024
09/27/2024
The best front yard flowerbed in the neighborhood.
09/09/2024

The best front yard flowerbed in the neighborhood.

Our garden has a new flower, bearded iris.
05/28/2024

Our garden has a new flower, bearded iris.

04/25/2024

SEVEN OF THE TOP GARDEN PESTS--WHAT WORKED + DIDN'T

Here is some great information from a survey that Mother Earth News did to learn more about what works, and doesn't, when it comes to limiting insect damage in organic vegetable gardens. They had 1300 gardeners from across the United States respond, so is pretty good. I've included 7 of the top garden pests and info:

1) SLUGS-- took top honors as the most bothersome pest in home gardens, with 55 percent of respondents saying the slimy critters give them trouble year after year. Handpicking was highly rated as a control measure (87 percent success rate), followed by iron phosphate baits (86 percent) and diatomaceous earth (84 percent).

Opinion was divided on eggshell barriers (crushed eggshells sprinkled around plants), with a 33 percent failure rate among gardeners who had tried that slug control method. An easy home remedy that received widespread support was beer traps (80 percent success rate).

2) SQUASH BUGS-- had sabotaged summer and winter squash for 51 percent of respondents, and even ducks couldn’t solve a serious squash bug problem. Most gardeners reported using handpicking as their primary defense, along with cleaning up infested plants at season’s end to interrupt the squash bug life cycle. The value of companion planting for squash bug management was a point of disagreement for respondents, with 21 percent saying it’s the best control method and 34 percent saying it doesn’t help.

Of the gardeners who had tried it, 79 percent said spraying neem on egg clusters and juvenile squash bugs is helpful. About 74 percent of row cover users found them useful in managing squash bugs.

3) APHIDS-- were on the watch list of 50 percent of respondents, but the success rates of various control techniques were quite high. Active interventions, including pruning off the affected plant parts and applying insecticidal soap, were reported effective, but so were more passive methods, such as attracting beneficial insects by planting flowers and herbs.

Several readers noted the ability of sweet alyssum and other flowers to attract hoverflies, which eat aphids. “We attract a lot of beneficials by planting carefree flowers in the vegetable garden, including calendula, borage, zinnias, cosmos and nasturtiums” (Midwest, more than 20 years of experience).

4) SQUASH VINE BORERS-- had caused problems for 47 percent of the survey respondents. The best reported control methods were crop rotation and growing resistant varieties ofCucurbita moschata, which includes butternut squash and a few varieties of pumpkin. TheC. moschata varieties are borer-resistant because they have solid stems. Interestingly, if you’re attempting to fend off squash vine borers, lanky, long-vined, open-pollinated varieties of summer squash (zucchini and yellow crookneck, for example) may fare better than hybrids, because OP varieties are more likely to develop supplemental roots where the vines touch the ground.

Many gardeners dump soil over these places, so if squash vine borers attack a plant’s main stem, the plant can keep on growing from its backup root system.

5) JAPANESE BEETLES-- Forty-six percent of respondents reported working in the unwelcome company of Japanese beetles, with handpicking being the most popular control method. Some gardeners grow trap crops of raspberries or other fruits to keep Japanese beetles away from plants. Several commonly used interventions — garlic-pepper spray, milky spore disease, pheromone traps and row covers — had high failure rates.

6) TOMATO HORNWORMS-- were of concern to 42 percent of our survey respondents. Bt and handpicking were the preferred control methods, and several folks commented that tomato hornworms are among the easiest garden pests to handpick (probably because they’re large, easy to spot and produce a telltale, pebbly trail).

Many gardeners reported seeing tomato hornworms often covered with rice-like cocoons of parasitic braconid wasps. “I had a lot of tomato hornworms this year, but the wasps took them out! Just like in the photos online and in bug books!” (Mid-Atlantic, more than 20 years of experience). Gardeners named zinnias and borage as good companion plants for reducing hornworm problems.

7) CUTWORMS-- were a concern for 41 percent of respondents, and effectiveness ratings for using rigid collars (made from plastic drinking cups or cardboard tissue rolls) to protect young seedlings from damage were amazingly high (93 percent effectiveness rating). A common practice to reduce cutworm damage is to cultivate the soil’s surface once or twice before planting and hope robins and other bug-eating birds will swoop in to gather the juicy cutworms. Big, sturdy seedlings are naturally resistant to cutworms, so many gardeners said they set out seedlings a bit late to avoid cutworm damage.

There are more Garden Pests than listed here, but wanted to list the Top 7 that Families ask about.

Here at THE SEED GUY, we have a great 60 Variety Heirloom Seed Package (34,000 Seeds) that has 49 Veggie Seed varieties, and 11 Herb Seed varieties. In this package, you will get several Herb varieties that are great Companion plants that will help keep Garden Pests away.. Small Farm Grown, Non GMO, fresh from the New Fall 2023 Harvest, and Good Pricing Now at $89.

You can click on link to our website to see Seed varieties included in package and to Order at https://theseedguy.net/seed-packages/50-60-variety-heirloom-seed-package.html

We also have 9 other Heirloom Seed Packages, and all our individual varieties in Stock Now on our Seed Guy website at https://theseedguy.net/15-seed-packages You can also Call Us 7 days a week at 918-352-8800 if you would rather Order By Phone. Thank you, and God Bless You and Your Family. :)

03/31/2024
03/22/2024

Tickets at Modestogardenclub.org or at any of the homes.

02/04/2024

Master Gardener Tip of the Week

A good rule-of-thumb for when to prune roses is President’s Day. There are many types of roses, including hybrid tea, grandiflora, and floribunda types, and they are not all pruned the same. These roses are best pruned to an open center to maximize access to light and ensure good air circulation to dry the leaves after spring rainstorms. To encourage outward growth, prune the canes about 1/8 to ¼ inch above an outward facing bud somewhere in the range of 12 to 24 inches from the ground (depending on type).

Most roses are grafted, so varieties that are prized for their color or fragrance are grafted onto a rootstock that imparts characteristics such as vigor or disease resistance. It is important to remove any canes originating below the graft union because these canes are part of the rootstock and generally have undesirable flowers compared to the named variety above the graft union.

When pruning, remove any spindly canes that are smaller than the diameter of a pencil. Also remove any very old, discolored canes. When you’re done pruning, you should have about 3-5 canes per rose bush.

If you want to learn more about pruning roses, the Lane County Master Gardeners are offering two rose pruning workshops in February. For more information, refer to the Events calendar: https://extension.oregonstate.edu/county/lane/events or visit https://extension.oregonstate.edu/gardening/flowers-shrubs-trees/pruning-roses

01/23/2024

Yarrow and Coneflowers 🌸

Address

Lodi, CA
95242

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
6pm - 7pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
6pm - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
6pm - 7pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+19165808772

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