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Gardeners' World Live 2011

By Adam Pasco on 14/06/2011 16:59:16

There's only one thing better than receiving emails, letters and phone calls from readers and that's meeting them in person. And with Gardeners' World Live starting tomorrow (Wednesday 15 June, 2011) and running until Sunday I'm looking forward


How to make a bug box

By Gardeners' World on 15/01/2010 16:53:23

, ladybirds, lacewings and bees.Untreated timberHollow canes such as bambooPieces of branch or other woodWood saw2.5cm nails and hammerDrill and wood drill bitScrewdriver and self-tapping screwall year round2 hoursMake a simple box using scraps of untreated


Hibernating insects

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/01/2009 17:12:27

some air flow through the house. Suddenly there were golden brown centipedes, spiders, ladybirds and lacewings running about everywhere.I felt like the man on the moon looking down on earth and witnessing a catastrophe. All the insects were enjoying


Jays

By Richard Jones on 18/03/2009 16:02:44

with sunbathing beasts: shieldbugs, spiders, ladybirds, bees, and two cats nestled in at the bottom. The newts have returned to the pond too; four of them were swimming about in there. These are the regular denizens of my garden, but two unusual visitors were a


Aphids

By Pippa Greenwood on 13/07/2011 17:29:37

fewer ladybirds in my garden this year. I expect they’re missing the aphids, too.Perhaps the birds are obligingly collecting the aphids up for their young, or they've all been parasitised by some wonder wasp. Who knows, maybe it was the hard winter after


Aphids

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 11:18:16

of the plant, attracting black sooty mould, which inhibits photosynthesis and deprives the plant of energy.Young tender growth is vulnerable to aphid attack. These tiny insects (1mm-7mm long) are usually green or black and breed fast, smothering the plant


Lily beetle

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:28:53

Scarlet beetles (6mm - 8mm long) with black heads eat the leaves, flowers and seedpods of lilies and other members of the lily family. Don't mistake them for ladybirds. Between April and September the beetles lay eggs on the undersides of leaves


Slugs and snails and puppy dogs' tails

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 05/02/2008 11:14:00

ladybird. The rest are the usual suspects: vine weevils (No.3 on the list), lily beetles (No.9) etc.No matter how depressed we may get with cushion scale (No.4=) or the depredations of berberis sawfly (No.7) there is always a silver lining. There are worse


Roses and their pests

By Richard Jones on 27/02/2008 10:20:00

are sprouting and they are adrift with aphids - I shall look forward to the attentions of hoverflies and ladybirds soon. A single specimen of the rose leafhopper Edwardsiana rosae tried to play hide and seek by sidling around to the other side of a leaf


Primula, lavender, aphids and slugs

By Jekka McVicar on 11/04/2008 17:23:00

with horticultural soft soap. After the initial spray, with the night temperatures warming up, we'll start our programme of integrated pest management. For aphid control we introduce parasitic wasps, hoverflies and ladybirds - the larvae (especially of the latter two


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