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Pear leaf blister mite

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:45:40

by hand any affected leaves and shoots. pearsspring to autumnMore advice on growing pearsTreating apple and pear scabPreventing pear wasp damageDealing with codling moth on fruit treesMonty's favourite fruit varieties


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 35

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:54:16

and shallotsOrder garlic and onion sets for autumn plantingPut grease bands on fruit trees to catch wingless winter mothsPlant out rooted strawberry runners and pot some up to bring into the greenhouse later in winter for early fruitsVegetables to sow now


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 45

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:55:01

Wrap grease bands around fruit trees to catch female winter moths climbing up from the soilPlant out garlic or start growing cloves in pots to plant out laterClear away old crops and dig over the groundSow hardy peas under fleece for an early crop


Leaf Miners

By Richard Jones on 26/07/2007 10:57:49

wing-tip to wing-tip is striped orange and white and quite pretty under a lens.It had been spreading across Europe from its first discovery in Macedonia in the middle of the 20th century and arrived in the UK in Wimbledon in 2002. I first noticed


Distinctive angles

By Richard Jones on 06/09/2007 18:09:49

Today on a fencepost, I saw the beautiful angular art-deco prize of an angle Shades, Phlogophora meticulosa. This wonderful moth is immediately recognizable and unmistakable, even though its colours vary across a whole spectrum of browns, beiges


Toad in the garden

By Richard Jones on 02/09/2009 11:02:26

the next day.At first I wondered if it was pilfering the guinea pig’s spilled food, but now I think it’s after moths.Although the weather is still warm and comfortable through the evenings, the nights are already drawing in and where before I was working


Earwigs

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:01:49

Earwigs, which can be up to 14mm long, hide during the day and emerge at night to feed. The females lay eggs in late-winter, usually in the soil, which hatch in spring. Although earwigs can damage plants, they also eat small pests and their eggs


Pear wasp damage

By Gardeners' World on 18/10/2011 15:47:19

-the-counter solution.pearssummer, autumn, winterMore advice on growing pear treesRemoving codling moth from pear treesTreating apple and pear scabPreventing pear leaf blister mite


Fruit and veg job checklist - week 36

By Gardeners' World on 23/11/2011 12:54:20

the crawling female winter mothCut off whole trusses of unripe fruits from outdoor tomatoes before they're hit by frost and ripen in a sheltered spotPlant out spring cabbagesDig up onions and lay them out in an airy space to dry before storing


Leaf miner

By Richard Jones on 24/09/2008 12:18:00

(former Yugoslavia), in the late 1970s, but was not identified until 1986. It has been spreading through Europe until it arrived here in 2002. No one knows quite where it came from, though there are several members of the genus in North America. There is a


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