Posted by Ignoramus11409 on June 5, 2006, 10:21 am
We are in Northern IL.
I planted watermelons in an area (front yard) that always had problems
of similar plants being victimized by some pests. Not sure which
ones. Apparently, they like eating young shoots.
How can I realiztically prevent that, thanks.
i
Posted by brickled on June 5, 2006, 10:47 am
u name it - i've faced about every watermelon pest out there - please be
more specific as to what has ailed you in the past.
after years of trying less energy-intensive methods, i've resorted to the
following:
1. 2 foot rabbit fence around the entire melon patch - this keeps out
rabbits (they often trash my sweet corn too) and turtles.
2. 10 foot t-posts spaced every 10 feet around the entire melon patch with a
16 guage wire run every 8" from just above the rabbit fence to the top of
the t-posts. this is sadly the only method i've tried that actually keeps
the deer from trashing the melon/corn patch. in the following picture u can
kind of get the idea of what i mean by this setup - i happen to be showing
corn in this pic but the same principles apply to the melon patch side of
the garden - http://home.earthlink.net/~brickled/_images/garden05008.jpg
3. from planting til the plants start outgrowing the enclosure, i put little
"cages" over each melon plant - this enclosure is made up of fencing
commonly available at TSC - has a mesh of 2x4" - this keeps robins and other
birds from "slicing" the plant's main stem. many years (maybe 1 in 3 years),
for unknown reasons, birds will do this - resulting in a totally severed
plant or one with many "slices" in its main stem. needless to say, this is
very detrimental to the plant's chances of success.
i can take some detailed pics of my setups if requested. each year, using
these plus other methods, i harvest way more melon than my family can
possibly consume. we are in zone 5 and primarily plant "yellow doll"
watermelon variety.
> We are in Northern IL.
> I planted watermelons in an area (front yard) that always had problems
> of similar plants being victimized by some pests. Not sure which
> ones. Apparently, they like eating young shoots.
> How can I realiztically prevent that, thanks.
> i
Posted by Ignoramus11409 on June 5, 2006, 11:37 am
> u name it - i've faced about every watermelon pest out there - please be
> more specific as to what has ailed you in the past.
> after years of trying less energy-intensive methods, i've resorted to the
> following:
> 1. 2 foot rabbit fence around the entire melon patch - this keeps out
> rabbits (they often trash my sweet corn too) and turtles.
That's good, since I also planted some corn as well.
Are there are chemical methods? Such as sprinkling cayenne pepper around?
> 2. 10 foot t-posts spaced every 10 feet around the entire melon patch with a
> 16 guage wire run every 8" from just above the rabbit fence to the top of
> the t-posts. this is sadly the only method i've tried that actually keeps
> the deer from trashing the melon/corn patch. in the following picture u can
> kind of get the idea of what i mean by this setup - i happen to be showing
> corn in this pic but the same principles apply to the melon patch side of
> the garden -
http://home.earthlink.net/~brickled/_images/garden05008.jpg
I do not think that deer are an issue.
i
Posted by brickled on June 5, 2006, 12:40 pm
well......i've read about many many "chemical" methods over the years.
depending on what the pest is, they have varying degrees of effectivenes.
sadly, even in best case senarios, u're stuck reapplying any such method
every so often as well as after each rain.
the web is full of many do it yourself home mixtures that should at least
get u started. for me, the wildlife has been entirely too aggressive and the
only effective control has been fencing.
> > u name it - i've faced about every watermelon pest out there - please be
> > more specific as to what has ailed you in the past.
> >
> > after years of trying less energy-intensive methods, i've resorted to
the
> > following:
> >
> > 1. 2 foot rabbit fence around the entire melon patch - this keeps out
> > rabbits (they often trash my sweet corn too) and turtles.
> That's good, since I also planted some corn as well.
> Are there are chemical methods? Such as sprinkling cayenne pepper around?
> > 2. 10 foot t-posts spaced every 10 feet around the entire melon patch
with a
> > 16 guage wire run every 8" from just above the rabbit fence to the top
of
> > the t-posts. this is sadly the only method i've tried that actually
keeps
> > the deer from trashing the melon/corn patch. in the following picture u
can
> > kind of get the idea of what i mean by this setup - i happen to be
showing
> > corn in this pic but the same principles apply to the melon patch side
of
> > the garden -
> http://home.earthlink.net/~brickled/_images/garden05008.jpg
> I do not think that deer are an issue.
> i
Posted by Ignoramus11409 on June 5, 2006, 12:50 pm
> well......i've read about many many "chemical" methods over the years.
> depending on what the pest is, they have varying degrees of effectivenes.
> sadly, even in best case senarios, u're stuck reapplying any such method
> every so often as well as after each rain.
> the web is full of many do it yourself home mixtures that should at least
> get u started. for me, the wildlife has been entirely too aggressive and the
> only effective control has been fencing.
Thanks. I decided to take a plunge and bought "hot pepper spray WAX",
and they claim that rains do not affect it all that much. I could
fence the area, but it is on the very front of our yard. Would not
look as good.
i
>> > u name it - i've faced about every watermelon pest out there - please be
>> > more specific as to what has ailed you in the past.
>> >
>> > after years of trying less energy-intensive methods, i've resorted to
> the
>> > following:
>> >
>> > 1. 2 foot rabbit fence around the entire melon patch - this keeps out
>> > rabbits (they often trash my sweet corn too) and turtles.
>>
>> That's good, since I also planted some corn as well.
>>
>> Are there are chemical methods? Such as sprinkling cayenne pepper around?
>>
>> > 2. 10 foot t-posts spaced every 10 feet around the entire melon patch
> with a
>> > 16 guage wire run every 8" from just above the rabbit fence to the top
> of
>> > the t-posts. this is sadly the only method i've tried that actually
> keeps
>> > the deer from trashing the melon/corn patch. in the following picture u
> can
>> > kind of get the idea of what i mean by this setup - i happen to be
> showing
>> > corn in this pic but the same principles apply to the melon patch side
> of
>> > the garden -
>> http://home.earthlink.net/~brickled/_images/garden05008.jpg
>>
>> I do not think that deer are an issue.
>>
>> i
>>
> I planted watermelons in an area (front yard) that always had problems
> of similar plants being victimized by some pests. Not sure which
> ones. Apparently, they like eating young shoots.
> How can I realiztically prevent that, thanks.
> i