Thursday, May 31, 2007

You've Got Lice! Boxwood Psyllid Control

Dusty in appearance, underhanded in action, the boxwood psyllid, also known as jumping plant lice, starts out looking like some sort of powdery fungus (or lice on that dude sitting next to you on your morning commute). Fortunately, the damage it causes is mostly cosmetic, short-lived, and, as any second-grader with lice will tell you, primarily focused on social ostracism and exclusion from birthday parties.

Of course, finding this out before an insecticide was applied would have been good, but my spraying should at least prevent these guys from laying next year's generation of super psyllids in my boxwoods.

What You Need to Know
1) Eggs hatch at around 80 growing degree days and adults appear at around 300.
2) They cause the leaves to cup, which is mostly an aesthetic issue.
3) No treatment is necessary as they'll soon die off but not before laying next year's eggs in the leaves.
4) If you do spray, they appear to be relatively easy to conquer with permethrin. However, permethrin can cause all sorts of nasty stuff, so maybe it'd be better to to accept your new identity as the kid with jumping plant lice.

Sources: University of Massachusetts Extension

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Update: Lost Hosta Makes It

Planted three weeks ago, this puppy was in sorry shape. It quickly turned the corner and today it suavely conceals its lowly origins.

Red Sails & Romaine Lettuce, Day 39










Both types of lettuce are growing quite well and practically trouble free, enough so to allow us the first harvest of the red sails. Kind of tasted like chicken.

(l to r: harvest, romaine, red sails lettuce)

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Weekly Update: Perennial Border Planted (GDD 303)

May 21 - Boxwood psyllids emerge; rudbeckia fulgida "goldsturm," echinacea purpurea "magnus," paeonia lactiflora "Bowl of Beauty," and phlox paniculata "Orange Perfection" planted in perennial border. Astilbes and spirea relocated within the border while a rhododendron was shipped to the backyard. Soaker hose and lots of mulch laid down.
May 22 - Chives in full swing bloom.

picture: peony bud

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Weekly Update: Heavy Rains Slow Things Down (GDD 207)

5/16 - Chives begin bloom
5/18 - 5/20 - Heavy rains bring vegetable garden to near standstill.
5/20 - Tulips lose flowers

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Weekly Update (GDD 175)

5/7 - Temperatures fall to 32.0 F. The last freeze of the season?
5/11 - Azalea in full bloom
5/12 - Lilac in full bloom
5/13 - Rhododendron "Cunningham White" in full bloom

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Lilac


Lilac, originally uploaded by tpl108.

Had no idea this shrub was anything special until it started to set flower buds a few weeks ago.

Lost Hosta; Will It Survive?

Wandering the "wooded" part of the yard, I found another hosta that had been abandoned last fall. Resting upside down for the entire winter, above ground no less, the shoots had started to bend back toward the roots, which were now on top. Snatched from certain death or, at least, complete lack of attention, it was quickly planted on the shady side of the garage. Anyone think it'll make it?

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

fothergilla gardenii (Witch Alder)


fothergilla gardenii, originally uploaded by tpl108.

The latest addition to the grange. This is one hep looking shurb. (That's right. I wrote shurb.)

More info: FDEP and Paghat

Sunday, May 06, 2007

Transplanting and Propagating Geraniums

What most people call a geranium is really pelargonium. (Yo' momma so stupid she calls pelargonium . . . wait for it . . . geranium! Oh, snap! There it is.) Cruel taunts aside, the plant's fairly easy to keep alive through the winter.

Nicked two cuttings last October, put one in water and the other in potting soil, kept them near a window for the past six or seven months and here are the results. The geranium pelargonium grown in potting soil became gigantic, even put out some flowers. The one grown in water doesn't look so hot, but it still deserves a spot - albeit a less vaunted one - on my driveway. (It's the smaller one in the dark green container. Interestingly, the imitation faux terracotta plant is the remnants of last year's herb container. Only the creeping thyme survived the winter outside. )

Source: University of Nebraska

Weekly Update: Beans Sprout (GDD 93)

5/1 - Grass seeds emerge, taking 10 days to germinate.
5/2 - Pole beans sprout, taking 11 days to germinate.
5/3 - "What a day for a mow!"
5/5 - All tulips in bloom.
5/6 - Soil temperature = 60F.