Posted by Suzanne D. on July 28, 2009, 6:10 pm
I just found two of my tomato plants nibbled down quite a bit. I suspect
tomato worms. We had these two years ago, but didn't seem to have a problem
last year.
Trouble is, our vines are up to nine feet tall, and bushy as all get out. I
have searched in them for quite a while (and offered the kids a dollar for
each worm found!), and can't seem to spot any. I am pretty sure they are
there, but they are eluding me.
Is there some way to make it easier to find tomato worms? Do they jitter if
your spray them, or glow under a black light, or turn color when you heat
them, or ANYTHING that would make it a little easier to find them? (I am
suspecting that the answer is NO, but maybe there's someone with some freak
tip out there who can help!)
--S.
Posted by Boron Elgar on July 29, 2009, 8:43 am
On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 16:10:10 -0600, "Suzanne D."
>I just found two of my tomato plants nibbled down quite a bit. I suspect
>tomato worms. We had these two years ago, but didn't seem to have a problem
>last year.
>Trouble is, our vines are up to nine feet tall, and bushy as all get out. I
>have searched in them for quite a while (and offered the kids a dollar for
>each worm found!), and can't seem to spot any. I am pretty sure they are
>there, but they are eluding me.
>Is there some way to make it easier to find tomato worms? Do they jitter if
>your spray them, or glow under a black light, or turn color when you heat
>them, or ANYTHING that would make it a little easier to find them? (I am
>suspecting that the answer is NO, but maybe there's someone with some freak
>tip out there who can help!)
>--S.
You can search leaves for droppings, which are black and abundant if
the worms are there. Then just start looking up above the leaves
where the droppings are.
They are wonderfully camouflaged, but I have my best hunting in the
morning.
Of course, it might be something else, too. Do you get Japanese
beetles in your area?
Boron
Posted by Suzanne D. on July 29, 2009, 1:47 pm
> You can search leaves for droppings, which are black and abundant if
> the worms are there. Then just start looking up above the leaves
> where the droppings are.
> They are wonderfully camouflaged, but I have my best hunting in the
> morning.
> Of course, it might be something else, too. Do you get Japanese
> beetles in your area?
I don't know about Japanese beetles, but I'm pretty sure it is tomato worms
due to the same snipping patterns as the last time (leaves at the top of the
plant eaten). I'll look for droppings; thanks.
--S.
Posted by v_coerulea on July 30, 2009, 7:05 pm
The droppings are characteristic and look like tiny hand grenades. There's
no mistaking them.
Gary
> On Tue, 28 Jul 2009 16:10:10 -0600, "Suzanne D."
>>I just found two of my tomato plants nibbled down quite a bit. I suspect
>>tomato worms. We had these two years ago, but didn't seem to have a
>>problem
>>last year.
>>
>>Trouble is, our vines are up to nine feet tall, and bushy as all get out.
>>I
>>have searched in them for quite a while (and offered the kids a dollar for
>>each worm found!), and can't seem to spot any. I am pretty sure they are
>>there, but they are eluding me.
>>
>>Is there some way to make it easier to find tomato worms? Do they jitter
>>if
>>your spray them, or glow under a black light, or turn color when you heat
>>them, or ANYTHING that would make it a little easier to find them? (I am
>>suspecting that the answer is NO, but maybe there's someone with some
>>freak
>>tip out there who can help!)
>>--S.
> You can search leaves for droppings, which are black and abundant if
> the worms are there. Then just start looking up above the leaves
> where the droppings are.
> They are wonderfully camouflaged, but I have my best hunting in the
> morning.
> Of course, it might be something else, too. Do you get Japanese
> beetles in your area?
> Boron
Posted by Frank on July 29, 2009, 11:43 am
> I just found two of my tomato plants nibbled down quite a bit. I suspect
> tomato worms. We had these two years ago, but didn't seem to have a problem
> last year.
> Trouble is, our vines are up to nine feet tall, and bushy as all get out. I
> have searched in them for quite a while (and offered the kids a dollar for
> each worm found!), and can't seem to spot any. I am pretty sure they are
> there, but they are eluding me.
> Is there some way to make it easier to find tomato worms? Do they jitter if
> your spray them, or glow under a black light, or turn color when you heat
> them, or ANYTHING that would make it a little easier to find them? (I am
> suspecting that the answer is NO, but maybe there's someone with some freak
> tip out there who can help!)
> --S.
In my experience, when there is even one worm there, top leaves start
to rapidly dissappear.
I was fortunate in spotting one early before he grew and got started
but it was dumb luck as I was not looking.
I use an innocous vegetable insecticide and have not had further
problems
>tomato worms. We had these two years ago, but didn't seem to have a problem
>last year.
>Trouble is, our vines are up to nine feet tall, and bushy as all get out. I
>have searched in them for quite a while (and offered the kids a dollar for
>each worm found!), and can't seem to spot any. I am pretty sure they are
>there, but they are eluding me.
>Is there some way to make it easier to find tomato worms? Do they jitter if
>your spray them, or glow under a black light, or turn color when you heat
>them, or ANYTHING that would make it a little easier to find them? (I am
>suspecting that the answer is NO, but maybe there's someone with some freak
>tip out there who can help!)
>--S.