Posted by AndyS on August 17, 2009, 4:32 pm
Andy comments:
My solution seems to be working well, and I wanted to share it...
Last year, mice, or birds, got to my cantalope as it started to
ripen and pecked
holes in the side..... I got very little yield.....
This year, as soon as the fruit got to baseball size, I took the
WalMart plastic
bags that they put your groceries in, and wrapped the fruit...
I just carefully put the bag around the fruit, and tied it loosely,
giving plenty of
room for the fruit to grow.....
I am getting a good yield, and NONE of the wrapped fruits have
been attacked
by predators..... A couple of the fruits I missed have been eaten, as
in last year....
It seems to work......
Any comments or improvements that can be suggested ???
Andy in Eureka, Texas
Eureka, where none of the women here think they are too fat to wear
tube tope.....
Posted by Pat Kiewicz on August 18, 2009, 8:13 am
AndyS said:
>Andy comments:
> This year, as soon as the fruit got to baseball size, I took the
>WalMart plastic
>bags that they put your groceries in, and wrapped the fruit...
> I just carefully put the bag around the fruit, and tied it loosely,
>giving plenty of
>room for the fruit to grow.....
> I am getting a good yield, and NONE of the wrapped fruits have
>been attacked
>by predators..... A couple of the fruits I missed have been eaten, as
>in last year....
> It seems to work......
Nylon stockings/pantyhose legs used to do the trick when I grew melons.
The hosiery expands with the melons, and doesn't trap moisture.
Haven't grown melons in a while. Wilt is the problem and cuke beetles
are the vector. I'm unwilling to spray (lots and lots) as a solution.
(I don't grow cucumbers any more, either. I was growing seedless
cukes in a screened box, but began to trouble with fungus.)
--
Pat in Plymouth MI
"So, it was all a dream."
"No dear, this is the dream, you're still in the cell."
email valid but not regularly monitored
Posted by AndyS on August 19, 2009, 5:59 pm
Andy replies:
Thanks for the tip, Pat. I do have a bit of a moisture problem,
but your
solution would fix it. I think any type of web stuff, like the bags
that
onions and oranges come in, might do the trick, also, as I don't have
access to panty hose.....
Andy in Eureka, Texas
> This year, as soon as the fruit got to baseball size, I took the
>WalMart plastic
>bags that they put your groceries in, and wrapped the fruit...
> I just carefully put the bag around the fruit, and tied it loosely,
>giving plenty of
>room for the fruit to grow.....
> I am getting a good yield, and NONE of the wrapped fruits have
>been attacked
>by predators..... A couple of the fruits I missed have been eaten, as
>in last year....
> It seems to work......