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Friday,November 2, 2007

Proctect Your Fruit Tree Against Pests

Winter moths are a common problem for most fruit trees particularly apples,pears,plums and cherries.

the Winter Moth CaterpillarThe adults emerge from the soil between late autumn and midwinter and the wingless females crawl up the trunk to lay their eggs on the branches.The green caterpillars can be easily identified in the early spring, due to the dark stripe along their backs and the way they arch their bodies when they move.

The catterpillars feed on the leaves and flowers not only can this reduce the amount of fruit produced or leave it deformed.It can weaken the tree and make it more open to diseases and other pest attacks.

Grease Band applied to a fruit treeThe most sensible preventive measure is to make a barrier so that adult winter moths (which can not fly) can not reach the branches.Try appying a sticky band of glue or grease around the trunks of the fruit trees and their stakes, to trap some of the female moths.

Place the bands 45cm (1ft 6inches) above soil level before the moths emerge latter this month.Although moth activity slows down after January some species are active until April, so you may need to reapply grease from time to time.Placing the sticky band is also useful for protecting your fruit trees against ants and vine weevil as well.

Look at a wide range of Garden Fruit Trees , Apple Trees , Apricot Trees , Aprium Trees ,Cherry Trees ,Nectarine Trees ,Peach Trees ,Pear Trees ,Plum Trees ,Pluot Trees and Prune Trees from MyGardenCenterOnline

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2 Comments on Proctect Your Fruit Tree Against Pests »

Friday,November 9, 2007

R. Wehner @ 9:12 pm:

Pluot tree, 1 yr. old has sticky residue at the base of the tree, also the bark has begun to split open. What kind of insect might this be and how to treat the tree? Thanks for any suggestions.

Wednesday,November 14, 2007

colin @ 6:25 am:

I did not know the answer to this one myself so I emailled
Master Gardeners and this is the reply they gave.

“I’m afraid we don’t have very good news for you and your pluot tree. It is
probably diseased and the infection is coming up through the root system.
There are no chemicals that will treat this.

Vincent Lazaneo, our Home and Farm Advisor, says that pluots need more
chilling than we currently have in this area. (I don’t know if you live in
a cool area or not.)Also, they sometimes suffer from wet winters, although
your one year old tree probably has not experienced that.

Sorry we cannot be more encouraging.

Jodie B., MG”

PS: they come from San Diago area

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