Re: Very few bugs.


Beth Rado <rado1000@hotmail.com> writes:

>I haven't seen very many bugs this year at all! 
>...
 >One thing I've done differently this year is cut off ALL male blossoms.  
>Early on, I cut every male blossom in sight before it even grew, then from 
>the time I started seeing females, I have let the males develop, but each 
>evening I cut whatever would bloom the following day since I haven't yet 
>needed males for pollination.  
>...
>Is it possible that because there have been no open blossoms that the bugs 
>just haven't located my plants yet?  Is that what draws them in?  
 
This is *quite* a good idea and theory!
 
I've been wondering about this sort of stuff ever since my first 
year last year, when I found cuke beetles and SVB, both of which I had 
never seen before in my life, attracted to my yard just because I grew 
2 pumpkin plants.  I was *really* amazed because I'm in the middle of 
a residential neighborhood... there isn't a farm for at least 2 miles, 
and the closest pumpkin/squash sort of farm is probably 8 miles or more.  
The bugs that flew in to my tiny patch flew quite a distance, 
and found my plants from afar, somehow.  I supposed they "smelled" them, 
but was wondering just what it was; perhaps it's the flower as you suggest.  
I'd be very interested in hearing what others have to say about this too!  
I hope everybody posts their responses to the list.
 
-----------
Rick Inzero
near Rochester, NY
rdi@cci.com

Did I see bees?  I did.   [read it backwards]

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