Posted by Soria Spain on May 31, 2009, 3:23 am
Hi
I live in a small village in Soria, Northern Spain and recently
inherited an old
allotment/orchard with some old apple and pear trees
(est 50 years old). I
noticed last year that catapillars had been
eating the leaves and they are doing
the same this year. I dont want
to spray chemicals on them and dont even know
if I want to remove them.
My question is: will they effect the fruits growth?
If so what is the
best non chemical way to remove them, if I must.
--
Soria
Spain
Posted by gunner on May 31, 2009, 10:59 am
> Hi
> I live in a small village in Soria, Northern Spain and recently
> inherited an old allotment/orchard with some old apple and pear trees
> (est 50 years old). I noticed last year that catapillars had been
> eating the leaves and they are doing the same this year. I dont want
> to spray chemicals on them and dont even know if I want to remove them.
> My question is: will they effect the fruits growth? If so what is the
> best non chemical way to remove them, if I must.
> --
> Soria Spain
try using a Bacillus thuringiensis ( Bt) or dusting with Diatomaceous
earth according to directions. Organics and neither will affect your fruit,
although the Bt is oft used in making some GM crops.
Posted by rossr35253 on May 31, 2009, 1:23 pm
wrote:
>>
>> Hi
>> I live in a small village in Soria, Northern Spain and recently
>> inherited an old allotment/orchard with some old apple and pear trees
>> (est 50 years old). I noticed last year that catapillars had been
>> eating the leaves and they are doing the same this year. I dont want
>> to spray chemicals on them and dont even know if I want to remove them.
>> My question is: will they effect the fruits growth? If so what is the
>> best non chemical way to remove them, if I must.
>>
>> --
>> Soria Spain
>try using a Bacillus thuringiensis ( Bt) or dusting with Diatomaceous
>earth according to directions. Organics and neither will affect your fruit,
>although the Bt is oft used in making some GM crops.
Depending on the strain, Bt is not necessarily organic. Several of the
Bt strains have themselves been genetically modified to work on
specific pests.
If your caterpillars are of the tent variety, you can do what we do.
Wait until dusk when the caterpillars have all returned to the tent,
then cut off the branch containing the tent, complete with its
caterpillars and burn it.
Ross.
Posted by gunner on June 1, 2009, 6:38 pm
> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Hi
>>> I live in a small village in Soria, Northern Spain and recently
>>> inherited an old allotment/orchard with some old apple and pear trees
>>> (est 50 years old). I noticed last year that catapillars had been
>>> eating the leaves and they are doing the same this year. I dont want
>>> to spray chemicals on them and dont even know if I want to remove them.
>>> My question is: will they effect the fruits growth? If so what is the
>>> best non chemical way to remove them, if I must.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Soria Spain
>>
>>try using a Bacillus thuringiensis ( Bt) or dusting with Diatomaceous
>>earth according to directions. Organics and neither will affect your
>>fruit,
>>although the Bt is oft used in making some GM crops.
>>
> Depending on the strain, Bt is not necessarily organic. Several of the
> Bt strains have themselves been genetically modified to work on
> specific pests.
> Ross.
Yes, but we are talking "Cats" here? do you know of a strain of "cat" BT
that is not organic?
> I live in a small village in Soria, Northern Spain and recently
> inherited an old allotment/orchard with some old apple and pear trees
> (est 50 years old). I noticed last year that catapillars had been
> eating the leaves and they are doing the same this year. I dont want
> to spray chemicals on them and dont even know if I want to remove them.
> My question is: will they effect the fruits growth? If so what is the
> best non chemical way to remove them, if I must.
> --
> Soria Spain