Posts Tagged ‘spray’
Monday, August 24th, 2009
“Don’t wear perfume in the garden - unless you want to be pollinated by bees.”
Anne Raver
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Tags: acid soils, animals, anther, apples, attract bees, attractive, autumn, bee attractant, Bee Keeping, bee visits, beekeeping, bees, bird cherry, black Alder, blackthorn, blueberry, Borage, bread, butterfly bush, Ceanothus, climate, clover, coastal garden, collecting, common privet, Container growing, cough, dog rose, dusk, elderberry, Escallonia, Evergreen, Exposed, exposure, female, flower, forage, fresh produce, fruits, garden, Geraniums, globe thistle, goat willow, grass, guelder Rose, hairy, hawthorn, hazel, Heather, Hebes, Herb garden, hive, honey, honey and lemon, honeybee, honeysuckle, hypericum, insects, Irish ivy, Killarney strawberry tree, kilometres, Lavender, Lawns, male, mixed hedgerow, native bees, native plants, native shrubs, nectar, parasitic mite, peas, people, Perennial plantings, Perfume, pesticides, pests, plants, pollen, pollen dust, pollinated, pollinating insects, pollination, proteins fats, Pyracantha, rowan, sage, scones, Sedum, selective, shedding, soil type, spray, spraying, stigma, Strawberries, sugars, Summer flowering shrubs, summers, supermarkets, swarms, thyme, tomatoes, trellis, trembling poplar, underplantings, Varroa destructor, veg, vegetables, walls, weedkiller, whitebeam, wild bee, wild cherry, wild crab apple, wild native hedgerow, wind, yields
Posted in Helpful insects., Uncategorized | No Comments »
Sunday, July 12th, 2009
As children most of us were very picky about what insects we liked. For me personally, earwigs, centipedes, spiders, and all sorts of flies (horseflies especially) scared the pants off me. Then there were the ladybirds, which for one reason or another always found favour with the younger me.
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Tags: adult, Anethum, angelica, aphids, astrantia, bug spray, centipedes, children, Co. Galway, Co. Kildare, Co. Westmeath, Co. Wexford, cold winter, dill, dry, earwigs, eggs, Eryngium, fennel, fingers, flies, Foeniculum, garden, gardeners, greenfly, Heracleum sphondylium, hibernating, hibernation, Hogweed, horseflies, insects, invasive, ladybird homes, Ladybird publishing, ladybirds, larvae, lettuce, Levisticum, lovage, low ladybird numbers, lupins, masterwort, Maynooth, mites, nettle, North Dublin, organic, over-winter, perennial garden, pest control, pesticide sprays, pesticides, pests, phoenix park, plant stems, Plants for ladybirds, Sea holly, sheltered, spiders, spotted, spray, storybooks, tree trunks, tubes, unpoisoned, whiteflies
Posted in Helpful insects., Uncategorized | 2 Comments »
Sunday, March 15th, 2009
As I strolled out towards the veg garden this morning, I bumped into some old friends who come for a visit each spring.
I smiled towards Mrs tulip, tipped my cap to Mr Crocus, waved happily across to the daffodil clan, then it all went wrong as I was stopped in my tracks by some unwelcome visitors.
You know the sort, someone you know see, you’ll give them the time of day, but would rather they did not visit.
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Tags: 5 cm, annual meadow grass, annual weeds, beds, Bindweed, borders, chemical, Chickweed, chipped bark, contact herbicide, Couch grass, Crocus, daffodil, Dandelion, Dandelions, dig, digging, Dock, Docks, ecologically friendly, feeding, flower garden, flowers, Gallup, garden, gardeners, gate, germination, Glyphosate, green, groundsel, growing, herbicide, hoe, hoeing, insects, large chip, leaves, medium, mini, mulch, mulched, mulching, organic, perennial weeds, pine forest, plantings, pull, pulling, root, Roundup, safety, Scutch grass, seed, seedling, shallow rooted, Shepard’s Purse, speedwell, spray, spring, Thistles, Touchdown, translocated, tulip, veg, vegetable plot, weed, Weedol, weeds, West of Ireland
Posted in Weeds on the allotment and in the garden. | No Comments »