Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Digest for misc.consumers.frugal-living@googlegroups.com - 6 updates in 2 topics

The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com>: May 18 09:20PM -0700

On 05/18/2015 05:16 PM, Dennis wrote:
 
> We just skip the middle man and let our chickens wander around and
> find their own bugs. Haven't seen a grasshopper around the yard for
> years. Wish they ate slugs, though.
 
Don't ducks eat slugs?
 
I went out last night with a flashlight in search of the worms that eat
my petunias. I pulled the whole flower off and stepped on the little
buggers, but tonight I took a hemostat :-) I wonder how long it takes
for the systemic fertilizer/bugkiller pellets to dissolve and enter the
plant...
 
The gardeners plant hundreds of petunia plants across the street. Why
don't the little bastards attack THEM?
 
--
Cheers, Bev
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Todd Flanders' hobbies include being quiet on long rides,
clapping to songs and diabetes.
"Bob F" <bobnospam@gmail.com>: May 19 06:04AM -0700

The Real Bev wrote:
> little buggers, but tonight I took a hemostat :-) I wonder how long
> it takes for the systemic fertilizer/bugkiller pellets to dissolve
> and enter the plant...
 
Such treatments of flowering plants will not be good for the bees in your area.
Michael Black <et472@ncf.ca>: May 19 03:47PM -0400

The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com>: May 19 04:04PM -0700

On 05/19/2015 06:04 AM, Bob F wrote:
>> it takes for the systemic fertilizer/bugkiller pellets to dissolve
>> and enter the plant...
 
> Such treatments of flowering plants will not be good for the bees in your area.
 
I have two petunias and 5 chrysanthemums, all in pots. I'm pretty sure
my impact will be minimal.
 
 
--
Cheers, Bev
--------------------------------------------------------------
"Never keep up with the Joneses. Drag them down to your level.
It's cheaper." -- Quentin Crisp 1908 - 1999
The Real Bev <bashley101@gmail.com>: May 19 04:08PM -0700

On 05/19/2015 12:47 PM, Michael Black wrote:
 
>> The gardeners plant hundreds of petunia plants across the street. Why don't
>> the little bastards attack THEM?
 
> Because they are all over at your place, eating your tastier flowers?
 
The ones across the street (mall parking lot) are bigger, nicer, and
lots more than I have. I talked to the gardener this morning, who was
putting out snail pellets for the slugs that were eating THEIR petunias.
Slugs are easy, it's the little caterpillars that I need to eliminate.
 
Much easier to grab the little nasties with a hemostat. I have several
sizes, including the biggest one I could find on line (cheaply made, but
good enough) to pull the weeds out of my cactus plants. I don't see how
people can survive without hemostats!
 
--
Cheers, Bev
--------------------------------------------------------------
"Never keep up with the Joneses. Drag them down to your level.
It's cheaper." -- Quentin Crisp 1908 - 1999
Derald <derald@invalid.net>: May 19 03:12PM -0400


>but tonight I took a hemostat :-)
Do you mean like a clip, or what?
--
D
You received this digest because you're subscribed to updates for this group. You can change your settings on the group membership page.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it send an email to misc.consumers.frugal-living+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.

No comments: