It was bad last year, but this year it’s epic. Lace bugs sucking leaf juices everywhere–and they make relatively quick work of even massive sunflower leaves, so asters, coneflowers, and goldenrods are goners. I’m not going to spray, which is the advised treatment. Sunflowers are annuals, so why bother (they just look ugly as the bugs work their ; way from bottom to top), but the other plants “should” come back fine next year. Of course, will they actually grow bigger or be stunted?
Click to expand and see the micro demons |
That’s the gorgeous blue leaf of Rudbeckia maxima |
An aster 100% defoliated & trying to regrow |
Grey-headed coneflower. Poof. |
Corthucha marmorata adults can overwinter, and a female might lay hundreds of eggs. My aster count will be lower this year as a result of this insect, and couple this with genista moth larvae defoliating baptisia in days, and aster yellows forcing me to rip out most of my E. purpurea–and the freaking 100 degree heat and no rain for 5-6 weeks–this summer blows. The only satisifaction I get is walking by the sunflowers and whacking the leaves to see lace bugs f ly off like dust, only to settle back down like volcanic ash.
But I should say, the garden is handling the drought fairly well. The lawn isn’t. But I need $ 500 to replace the front lawn with buffalo grass and clumps of side oats grama for a nice shortgrass look, which isn’t happening unless the serviceberry I can’t save starts sprouting benjamins.
No comments:
Post a Comment