Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Vacation tips for your plants...



Vacation Tips For Your Plants

As you plan for your vacation you should take into consideration that your garden and plants are going to miss you. There are certain things you can do that will cut down on your absolute need to be there, but it does mean preparing for vacation needs a few days before you leave.

As you well know, a recently fed plant will have a tendency to grow. This can contribute to an increase in water needs or make it more succulent for the voracious appetite of garden invaders. Put off the normal feeding, or if it must be fed, cut the feeding to half strength and plan on providing the second half when you return.

Mulching is probably the most important thing you can do before leaving on vacation. Be sure you have watered the area before you apply mulch, then water enough after it is applied to have the mulch damp on its own without having to draw moisture from the soil.

Mulch can be used in flowerbeds, vegetable gardens and around trees and shrubs. Leave approximately six inches around the trunks of trees and shrubs so they can breathe. It is even safe to add a little to containers but take care that the stems are not choked by the mulch.

Containers can be moved to a light shade area for the time being. Hanging baskets should be taken down so that they are more easily watched unless you have a drip system that is on a timer. While you are gone, the local bugs will not be on a holiday and would be happy if you forgot about them.

Use Sluggo Plus to take care of snails, ants, some cutworms and earwigs during your absence.

Indoors plants can also be taken care of with a little thought. Large container plants should be watered well before you leave and if the plant can be moved, place it away from the windows so it will not dry out. You can put small plants in the bathtub after they have been well watered. The coolness of the bathroom will help retain moisture. Do not leave plants standing in water.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Thrips on the loose in your garden



With the onset of warm weather we are hearing reports of Thrips damage. These destructive insects wreck havoc in gardens, so we're devoting time this month to learning more about them. -- The Garden Guru

WHAT THEY LOOK LIKE: Thrips are tiny, slender sucking insects that feed on tissue surfaces. Adults are commonly yellowish or blackish and shiny. Thrips have several generations a year. Females lay tiny eggs within leaf tissue or in the curled or distorted foliage caused by feeding nymphs or adults. Pupae can occur on plants where active stages feed, or mature nymphs may drop and pupate near the soil surface. There are Citrus thrips, Cuban Laurel Thrips that feed on Ficus microcarpa (Indian Laurel Fig), flower thrips (they can damage roses and gladiolas) and greenhouse thrips. Thrips seem to like rhodies that are drought-stressed so on warm, sunny, windy weather rhodies need regular water and the occasional shower to be less hospitable to thrips.

DAMAGE: They feed in flowers, buds, under leaves, or other hidden areas of growing plant parts such as central terminals. This sneaky habit is what makes it hard to control them. Citrus thrips can occur on most fruit trees, California pepper trees and pomegranate. That infestation is indicated by yellow to brownish scabby feeding scars that form on fruit, often in a ring around the citrus stem. The damage from flower thrips can be discoloration, blasted (brown dry blossoms that fail to open) and stippling. The more common damage seen is the bleaching and stippling of leaves. The once green leaves take on a slivery appearance and when you turn the damaged leaf over you will notice the tiny black excrement specks. They look like tiny drops of oil. The stippling may also resemble similar damage from spider mites and lace bugs.

CONTROLS: Biological Controls-Beneficial predators such as Dustywings, lacewings (sold in our stores), and predaceous mites will chow down on citrus thrips. Pirate bugs, lacewings, spiders and predaceous mites will help control plant-feeding thrips. Encourage naturally occurring populations of beneficials by controlling dust (hosing off foliage) and avoiding persistent pesticides. Spinosad is a biorational insecticide, which utilizes the fermentation by-products of Saccharopolyspora spinosa (an Actinomycete-yeast!) as it’s active ingredient. It must be ingested to work so it does not affect beneficials and is recommended for thrips, caterpillars, and beetles.

Mechanical Controls- Sticky Blue Thrip Traps can be hung near infested plants. Chemical Controls-Most insecticides have limited success since thrips reproduce year-round and they are protected from sprays by leaf curls or other plant parts that surround them.

For more info and actual pictures of thrips damage please bring a sample of the bug or damage and let Sloat’s senior staff diagnose the problem.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Solstice Sale starts today!


Our Solstice Sale starts today for Gardener's Reward Members...and continues through the weekend for all. You're coming, right??

Full details on the Solstice Sale can be found here:http://www.sloatgardens.com/hot-deals/solstice11.html

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

wet, cold weather...

A note to gardeners!

This wet cold weather is affecting everyone's vegetable garden this year. Those warm loving eggplant, cucumber, and basil are not happy. Even people in the nursery industry are having problems in their own gardens.

So, if you are an inexperienced gardener -- of even if you have been gardening for a long time....we're all in the same cold & soggy boat together!

-- Sloat Garden Guru

Monday, June 6, 2011

This just in!








Talavera Pottery arrived in our Novato store this weekend!

This colored mexican pottery is filled with frogs, lizards, chickens and other delightful creatures. Come in and check out our newest shipment!


Flowers for a Dahlia & Hummingbird Garden




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