dragoneggs
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2013
- Messages
- 14,548
- Location
- Seabeck, Washington
- Tractor
- Kubota BX-25D, Kubota Z122RKW-42
Back home from a Business trip to Japan and was greeted with ripe tomatoes from the green house, raspberries, and broccoli raab from the garden. Better half has been busy.
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Found her coded plot map too!
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Pests in potato patch, I've sprayed Sevin 3 times and can't seem to kill these.
What are they and what would you try to kill with?



Remember this???
Well, so far it has led to this, and more. First time I have picked vine ripe tomatoes in years. These came straight from the garden. Previously, I had to pick them early or the squirrels would get them. And so far we have enjoyed the fresh corn instead of the raccoons. Hoping for continued success.
And the result is this for supper:
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Remember this???
Well, so far it has led to this, and more. First time I have picked vine ripe tomatoes in years. These came straight from the garden. Previously, I had to pick them early or the squirrels would get them. And so far we have enjoyed the fresh corn instead of the raccoons. Hoping for continued success.
And the result is this for supper:
![]()

Good work. I'm getting a few Pruden's Purple a day, but at least 20-25 of the little Yellow Pear tomatoes. I eat about half of them right in the garden.
Here is today's pickings. First pole beans and first of that crinkly pepper.
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That's a Colorado Potato beetle larvae...Permethrins or Pyrethrin products work better than Carbaryl (Sevin). In fact that one product is not even on the recommended list of controls in the New England Vegetable Management guide. NEVMG
There are also neonicotinoide insecticides that also work like acetamiprid and imadacloprids but neonicotinoides usage can be extremely harmful to bees.
The bacterium product Spinosad, Bullseye is one trade name easily obtainable (another product is Entrust) and the Bullseye has always worked excellent for me and is all I have ever needed to use. You will find them dead right where chew on the leaf. Blows their little tummies right up
There are 3 stages with CPB...the adults, the eggs and the soft bodied larvae like in your photo. Hand controls can be effective and a non chemical way to keep down pest pressure if the crop is small enough to manage, look for the egg cluster on the underside of the leaves and crush them.
The guide also views up to 15% defoliation to be an acceptable threshold limit before chemical applications.
Sysop, those are some big berries. We have picked a few dozen off the bushes we planted here at the house last year. I've picked a couple of quarts off the patch over at the old house.
My garden today...looking good after being beat down last week with wind, cold air and rain! Was only +49F last Sunday afternoon.
Cukes suffered the worst.
Less than 30 days in...May 16 was snow flurries here and measurable accumulation higher on the mountain.
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Picked some corn to take to work tonight for me and the guys at the plant. Grilling steaks and corn for Fathers Day since we're working.
The heirloom okra is finally coming in and so are some of the peas. The deer have devastated a lot of the peas and such. If they don't quit I may be putting some venison in the freezer soon.
I'll probably harvest the rest of the ears of corn over the next few weeks and try for a second planting as soon as it's dry enough to get the tractor in the field and till.