Japanese beetles
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- Seed
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2011 2:35 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
Japanese beetles
So everyone around here is seriously just throwing a fit about those Japanese beetles...I've seen some on my rasberries, but, knock on wood, we haven't been taken over yet....
Will they eat my bananas? Anyone ever had experience with this?? That MUST NOT HAPPEN!!! I know they ripped my friend's hostas to shreds last year, they were darn near unrecognizable... but they really did spare my yard last year for some reason. But...I'm just curious if anyone's ever seen them go after bananas. I have a couple basjoos and a maurelii. (all small)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_beetle
Will they eat my bananas? Anyone ever had experience with this?? That MUST NOT HAPPEN!!! I know they ripped my friend's hostas to shreds last year, they were darn near unrecognizable... but they really did spare my yard last year for some reason. But...I'm just curious if anyone's ever seen them go after bananas. I have a couple basjoos and a maurelii. (all small)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_beetle
- TerdalFarm
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- Seed
- Posts: 24
- Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2011 2:35 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
- TerdalFarm
- Palm Grove
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
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That Wikipedia link says they attack 200 plant species
Can't say I've ever seen one.
Where are you? Ontario?
If you already own chickens...as a precaution, maybe put the plants with the chickens, or vice versa like Erik did.
Anyway I hope the beetles leave your naners alone.
Barb

Can't say I've ever seen one.
Where are you? Ontario?
If you already own chickens...as a precaution, maybe put the plants with the chickens, or vice versa like Erik did.
Anyway I hope the beetles leave your naners alone.
Would a raccoon fight/kill a rooster?one rooster in my garden now and he helps
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
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- Seed
- Posts: 24
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- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
- Posts: 11325
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 7:31 pm
- Location: Vernon BC, Zone 5a or 5b (close to 6A!)
Thanks for adding your location.
Hey, with chickens, you won't have any bugs.
Just feed them packaged chicken food before they run out of bugs.
Barb
Hey, with chickens, you won't have any bugs.
Just feed them packaged chicken food before they run out of bugs.

Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
- TerdalFarm
- Palm Grove
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roosters
The hens never did real damage to Canna or banana. All over the tropics people have Gallus, Canna and Musa living happily together. Give it a try!
A good rooster will give his life for his hens. Our all-time best rooster, "sweet honey comb" (named by a little boy who liked that he could pick up the biggest rooster and bring it inside to play) was killed by a racoon but kept his hens alive one night. As for hawks, a rooster will accompany a group of hens and keep a watch for hawks while "his" hens eat. If a hawk comes near, he lets the hens know to run and he goes for cover last to draw the hawks attention to himself.
We are down to the one rooster now. He sleeps in the barn, but comes to meet me every morning and we walk through the garden at dawn. I knock grasshoppers off the bananas and palms for his breakfast.
A good rooster will give his life for his hens. Our all-time best rooster, "sweet honey comb" (named by a little boy who liked that he could pick up the biggest rooster and bring it inside to play) was killed by a racoon but kept his hens alive one night. As for hawks, a rooster will accompany a group of hens and keep a watch for hawks while "his" hens eat. If a hawk comes near, he lets the hens know to run and he goes for cover last to draw the hawks attention to himself.
We are down to the one rooster now. He sleeps in the barn, but comes to meet me every morning and we walk through the garden at dawn. I knock grasshoppers off the bananas and palms for his breakfast.
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- Arctic Palm Plantation
- Posts: 11325
- Joined: Sun Feb 18, 2007 7:31 pm
- Location: Vernon BC, Zone 5a or 5b (close to 6A!)
Neat story, Erik.
Funny how we become so attached to most things.
Barb
Funny how we become so attached to most things.
Barb
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If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt.
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- Clumping Palm
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Ya know.... its funny how all the natural predator species for the beetle, are the species we detur from our yards LOL. THres a few plants they dont like, so mabey planting some of these around the ones you dont want them around will detur them? This should also help confuse them, due to diversification.
http://www.ehow.com/list_5955700_natura ... etles.html
http://www.ehow.com/way_5632021_natural ... etles.html
http://yardener.com/YardenersPlantProbl ... esNextYear (this one seemed really good)
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index ... 420AAq67Hi
Theres tons of things online about it. Id go the plant route myself, as well as attracting as many birds as possible ( good reason for a few trees!).
**edit
Theres a very good theory out now too, that basicaly states dont do a thing to the pests, as long as there isnt major harm being done. The second you spray insecticide, you dont kill just the pests, you kill every other one around it (species wise). The pests come back faster then the predators, so you spray again, knocking the predators back even further..... You can possibly make things worse.
THis year I got to test this out. My roses inevitably attracted aphids (build it they will come right). So i got the soapy water, and sprayed it. Boom, instant reduction in bugs (almost all of them remember). I went out a few days later, i couldnt believe the amount of bugs on it now, and not just aphids spider mites now too. I reluctantly didnt do a damn thing. The top canes of the rose was covered in bugs, yet the plant showed no real ill effects. It bloomed like crazy, after we had 4 days of rain ( washing the plants washes away bugs) while the top still had some aphids a few days after and had not bloomed yet. 3 weeks after the spray, and leaving it the plant had no ill effects, they were almost non exsistant ( and hadnt noticeably spread to other plants).
Of course, if the plant is suffering, even the hippie plant books ive read suggest either treating it, or killing it (with what ever means you are comfortable with).
http://www.ehow.com/list_5955700_natura ... etles.html
http://www.ehow.com/way_5632021_natural ... etles.html
http://yardener.com/YardenersPlantProbl ... esNextYear (this one seemed really good)
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index ... 420AAq67Hi
Theres tons of things online about it. Id go the plant route myself, as well as attracting as many birds as possible ( good reason for a few trees!).
**edit
Theres a very good theory out now too, that basicaly states dont do a thing to the pests, as long as there isnt major harm being done. The second you spray insecticide, you dont kill just the pests, you kill every other one around it (species wise). The pests come back faster then the predators, so you spray again, knocking the predators back even further..... You can possibly make things worse.
THis year I got to test this out. My roses inevitably attracted aphids (build it they will come right). So i got the soapy water, and sprayed it. Boom, instant reduction in bugs (almost all of them remember). I went out a few days later, i couldnt believe the amount of bugs on it now, and not just aphids spider mites now too. I reluctantly didnt do a damn thing. The top canes of the rose was covered in bugs, yet the plant showed no real ill effects. It bloomed like crazy, after we had 4 days of rain ( washing the plants washes away bugs) while the top still had some aphids a few days after and had not bloomed yet. 3 weeks after the spray, and leaving it the plant had no ill effects, they were almost non exsistant ( and hadnt noticeably spread to other plants).
Of course, if the plant is suffering, even the hippie plant books ive read suggest either treating it, or killing it (with what ever means you are comfortable with).
"The definition of insanity, is doing the same thing over and over, and expecting different results" - einstien
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Check out my new Blog! http://canadianplant.wordpress.com/
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