Showing posts with label neem oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neem oil. Show all posts

Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Lily bug beetles - they have won!

larvae
 I have something to admit. I've lost the Lily Bug Beetle Battle.
(Say that fast three times!)
lily beetles
I've been religiously spraying Neem oil on them, until this past couple of weeks. It is an amazing preventative, but you must be vigilant (every 5 - 7 days when the larvae are hatching). I stomp on them when I see them, or feed them to the goldfish.  They like the larvae, poo or no poo!
Voracious!

This one was toast.
Then spray plants with the leaf shine. It works wonders.I was negligent with the Neem oil
But, I was distracted with family stuff.
On each half-chewed leaf, you will see this awful sight. This is the larvae, covered in its own poo! It is so sick.



Lily bug larvae from Jennifer Jilks on Vimeo.
This video is about Lily bug larvae. The lily bugs have won. I was negligent with the Neem oil, which keeps them at bay. They house themselves in their own poo, my goldfish like them.

More resources:

Lily Leaf Beetle Life Cycle from the U. Mass. They say, "This pest will only lay its eggs on true lilies and Fritillaria species."

Ottawa Orchid Society’s Fact Sheet on Neem

Thursday, 2 May 2013

It's lily bug season!


We've had a lovely few days of warm temperatures. Everything is coming up, coming back, or awakening!
Including our asiatic lilies and red lily bugs!

How do you get rid of lily bugs?
I've ordered Neem Oil, and spray it faithfully on the leaves of my lilies.


See the holes in the leaves?

They're back!

And another one!

If I can't see you,
you can't see me!


The lily bugs have been active. Those little darlings who love eating Asiatic Lilies, fornicating in great glee on the luscious leaves (see below!), then the larvae live in their own poop on the plants. The flowers that result are quite droopy, if you don't either catch them, drown them in soapy water, or feed the bugs to your ducks. They are really gross! 

I have been happy with the results of the Neem Oil. A simple, natural solution.



You can order it, if it isn't in one of your local nurseries. 
You mix a bit with water, and add some surfactant, and spray the plants every 5 - 7 days.
Our Guinivere and her lillies


More resources:


Lily Leaf Beetle Life Cycle from the U. Mass. They say, "This pest will only lay its eggs on true lilies and Fritillaria species."

Ottawa Orchid Society’s Fact Sheet on Neem

Sunday, 5 August 2012

Garden flowers: tiger lily, echinacea, water lily


I am happy to report that I have kept the wee, red lily bugs at bay! My Neem Oil treatment is wonderful!
The dragonflies, bees, crab spider and monarchs are welcome, however!
 

Thursday, 17 June 2010

neem oil

The lily bugs have been active. Those little darlings who love eating Asiatic Lilies, fornicating in great glee on the luscious leaves (see below!), then the larvae live in their own poop on the plants. The flowers that result are quite droopy, if you don't either catch them, drown them in soapy water, or feed the bugs to your ducks. They are really gross!

I have been happy with the results of the Neem Oil. A simple, natural solution.



You can order it, if it isn't in one of your local nurseries.
You mix a bit with water, and add some surfactant, and spray the plants every 5 - 7 days.

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Lily bug beetles

Here is a photo of our old house near Ottawa. We had bought the house in 2004 from an Italian family who grew not only many flowers in raised beds, but grapes, in this heavily treed Nepean, Ontario, property.

The owner had difficulty selling, since they were in an older part of the city and were on well water with a rickety septic system. The previous owners made wine from the grapes and the basement had a wine cellar.

I adored this home, with 3 skylights. The roof needed replacing, which we completed in 2005, on this 1960s house. We lived with renovations for a long season. Hours were spent creating gardens around the back, researching for shade plants like hostas and lily of the valley. I had created a pond, built from old flagstones from the front steps, which also had needed replacing.

One of the best parts of this garden were the lilies. The owner had lovingly planted many of them in various shades. The problem was, of course, the lily bugs.

These bright red bugs ravage the leaves, leaving lovely a sticky goo behind on the leaves. I did some research and found out from my gardening magazines that the goo was, in fact, their waste product! Yuck. They suggested going around every day, squishing the bugs, underfoot if you were squeamish, or dropping them in a bucket of water. What a time consuming task.

But these bugs are bugs that are easily controlled!

I found in one of my nursery catalogues a product called Neem Oil. What a difference. You spray the leaves and this natural tree oil keeps the bugs from reproducing. (You can see them doing their dance on the right!)

When I moved here to Muskoka (with only two weeks notice) in April, 2006, I left my poor husband back in Ottawa caring for my garden.
It was his job to spritz the Neem Oil on my Asiatic lilies, to prevent the lily bugs from eating the beautiful plants alive. Not a gardener, I had to first explain what a lily was, and then hope and pray all would be well. I have no idea what happened. It is sad leaving a garden behind, but move on, you must.

I cannot help but mark the arrival of the dreaded lily bugs again this season. They are not as bad in Muskoka, as in the city. But I still keep my bottle of Neem Oil in the sun, ready for a spritz. I dodge the black flies, hope for a wind, hot too much to throw off the spray and waltz around the garden spreading the oil. What a relief. Here is a foreshadowing: Guinevere sits, in August, 2008, admiring my lilies.


Then there is my mosquito hawk, spotted yesterday, who was threading its way around the garden, looking for prey. You go!

The tulips look no worse for wear with cool night time temperatures.









More resources:

Lily Leaf Beetle Life Cycle from the U. Mass. They say, "This pest will only lay its eggs on true lilies and Fritillaria species."

Ottawa Orchid Society’s Fact Sheet on Neem