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Category Archives: insects

Essential Oils in the Garden

28 Tuesday Aug 2018

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Essential oil, gardening tips, Herbs, insects, Organic, Pest control

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

companion plants, Essential oil, health, insect repellant, Pest control


OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Essential oils play several roles in the garden. They are a natural pest deterrent and as pests carry disease in the form of bacteria and viruses, the oil’s antibacterial and antiviral properties act as a form of preventative medicine for your garden. Fungi and mould are other problems essential oils can deal with quickly and effectively.
Strong healthy plants resist disease, and essential oils build up the health of plants, an example being that roses love to be in the company of garlic, basil or thyme and you can either plant them around the bush or use their essential oil when watering them. Add 2 drops of each essential oil to your watering can, mix well and water.
Essential oils not only control pests and make your crop stronger, they improve the taste and fragrance of the plant. Ants can be deterred by peppermint. To clear a nest just put 2 neat drops of peppermint oil directly onto the nest. If ants are coming into your house put 1 or 2 drops of oil where they enter. Thyme and lavender oils protect all vegetables and can be used in your watering can.
Of course, certain insects are essential for pollination, including bees, wasps and butterflies, and using essential oils in your garden will attract these useful insects. Bees especially like coriander.
Sprays can be used as insect deterrents, to banish fungi and mildew, or to encourage growth. Use 4 – 6 drops of essential oil in 4 litres of water for spraying onto flowers, fruit and vegetables. Treated with the antifungal essential oils the mould and fungi do not survive very long and simply disappear. Patchouli, Tea Tree and Cinnamon are recommended.
Slugs can be easily deterred using essential oils. They have an acute sense of smell and hate the smell of garlic. Add 1 teaspoon of oil to your watering can, mix well and water the area where the slugs and snails are causing damage.

NATURAL PEST REPELLANTS
Insect Essential Oil
Ants – peppermint, garlic, citronella
Aphids – peppermint, cedarwood, hyssop
Black Fly – lavender, tagetes
Caterpillars – peppermint
Fleas – lemongrass, citronella, lavender
Flies – lavender, citronella, peppermint, basil
Gnats – citronella, patchouli
Lice – peppermint, cedarwood
Mosquitoes – lavender, citronella, lemongrass
Slugs – garlic, cedar wood, pine
Snails – cedarwood, pine, garlic, hyssop
Ticks – thyme, citronella, sage
Weevils – sandalwood, citronella, sage

GOOD COMPANIONS
Vegetable Essential Oil
Asparagus basil
Green beans lavender, basil
Beetroot marjoram
Broccoli basil, thyme
Cabbage peppermint, sage, thyme
Cauliflower thyme
Celery geranium
Cucumber sage
Leeks hyssop
Lettuce tagetes
Onions chamomile
Peas geranium
Potatoes basil, sage
Tomatoes basil

Video

The Bee crisis we cannot ignore

29 Tuesday Jul 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Honey Bee, insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

environment, honeybee, nature


Mayhem in Ariston

23 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Gardens, Honey Bee, insects

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Bee, garden, Honeybee theft, storm damage, Tree


A huge storm came through last week. The wind blew hard and broke this Syringa tree virtually in half. It fell crushing  the perimeter fence.

this tree has suffered so much damage that it will will now have to be cut down.

this tree has suffered so much damage that I am afraid it is now firewood.

 

I was also devastated to find that we had a robber visit and steal our wild hive of Bees.

These wild bees had made their home in a Tyre which has being lying underneath a pile of wood. All that was left was this empty comb.  They even took the broodcomb

These wild bees had made their home in a Tyre which had being lying underneath a pile of wood. All that was left was this empty comb. They even took the brood-comb. 

Black Eyed Susan

23 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Colours, Flowers, gardening tips, Gardens, Growing, Honey Bee, insects, Perennials, South African Endemic

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Bee, Black Eyed Susan, butterfly, environment, Flowers, garden, honeybee, plants, South African endemic plant


 

Thunbergia alata or “Black Eyed Susan”  is a happy fast growing and long flowering vine. It is a favourite here in South Africa, as it is not fussy about the soil and needs only moderate water. It is mostly evergreen and covers ugly places fast.

Ecology
Black-eyed susan is probably pollinated by bees. An insect visiting the flower will touch the stigma first, with its back, and then the anthers, getting a load of pollen that is then carried to another stigma. The flowers reflect ultra violet light in a pattern that is visible to insects but not to humans. This helps insects find the centre of the flower. Seeds are perhaps ejected mechanically when the fruit splits open. A butterfly, Junonia ovithya, or the eyed pansy, and moths also visit these plants to lay eggs, for the larvae eat the leaves. Hence this creeper, being attractive to insects, helps bring birds into a garden. Birds also often nest in the thickly tangled stems.

Flowers always make people better, happier, and more helpful; they are sunshine, food and medicine for the soul. Luther Burbank

Flowers always make people better, happier, and more helpful; they are sunshine, food and medicine for the soul.
Luther Burbank

Milk Weed

03 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in ecology, gardening tips, Honey Bee, insects, South African Endemic

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Carl Linnaeus, environment, Greek god of healing, insulation, kapok, Milkweed, Monarch Butterfly, nature, nectar, pillows, South African endemic plant, Wax


Milk weed Photo : B. Perrin

Milk weed – Gomphocarpus physocarpus-
Photo : B. Perrin

Carl Linnaeus named the genus after Asclepius, the Greek god of healing, because of the many folk-medicinal uses for the milkweed plants.

Milkweed is named for its milky juice which consists of a latex containing alkaloids and several other complex compounds including cardenolides. Some species are known to be toxic. The San use it as poison for the spears while fishing.

Milkweeds are an important nectar source for bees and other nectar-seeking insects, and a larval food source for monarch butterflies.

The milkweed filaments from the follicles are hollow and coated with wax, and have good insulation qualities. During World War II, over 5,000 t (5,500 short tons) of milkweed floss were collected in the United States as a substitute for kapok. As of 2007, milkweed is grown commercially as a hypoallergenic filling for pillows.

 

 

Trouble in the Hive

31 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Health, Honey Bee, insects

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bee, Beetle larvae, Cape Town, Colony collapse disorder, environment, Hive Beetle, Hive Beetle Larvae, honey bee colonies, SHB, Small hive beetle, Wax Moth


Hive Beetle Larvae hatching and feeding on the Honey

Small hive beetle (SHB) – Aethina tumida

The small hive beetle can be a destructive pest of honey bee colonies, causing damage to comb, stored honey and pollen. If a beetle infestation is sufficiently heavy, they may cause bees to abandon their hive. Its absence can also be a marker in the diagnosis of Colony Collapse Disorder for honey-bees. The beetles can also be a pest of stored combs, and honey (in the comb) awaiting extraction. Beetle larvae may tunnel through combs of honey, feeding and defecating, causing discoloration and fermentation of the honey.

African bees are able to keep the beetles in check but weakened colonies may lose control over their beetle populations.  The colonies will then abscond and leave the infested nest site behind.

Small hive beetles feed on bee brood and food reserves and reproduce within hives, but as soon as the larvae reach the wandering stage, they crawl out of the hives to pupate in the soil, (within 20 m of the hive).

 

Small hive beetle larvae (wandering stage) and adult SHB emerging from soil.

Small hive beetle larvae (wandering stage) and adult SHB emerging from soil.

The small hive beetle is considered a secondary pest in South Africa, and, as such, has not been the subject of major control efforts.

Biological control through beneficial soil nematodes specific to the SHB is also effective. Nematodes are microscopic roundworms found living naturally in most soils. Many species of nematodes exist and each has a unique purpose in nature. Also they pose no threat to the environment

What do you think ?

10 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Art Gift, Colours, Flowers, Honey Bee, insects, Photography, Quotes

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

art gifts, Bee, deviantart, Flowers, honeybee, nature, photography, quote, sunflower


What do you suppose? A Bee sat on my nose. Then what do you think? He gave me a wink, And said "I beg your pardon I thought you were a garden English Rhyme

What do you suppose?
A Bee sat on my nose.
Then what do you think?
He gave me a wink,
And said “I beg your pardon
I thought you were a garden
English Rhyme.

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Flowers are…

03 Sunday Nov 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Art Gift, Flowers, Honey Bee, insects, Organic, Photography, Quotes

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

art gift, art print, deviantart, environment, Flowers, honeybee, nature, Photo, photography, plants, quotes


Flowers are the sweetest thing God ever made. Henry Ward Beecher.

Flowers are the sweetest thing God ever made.
Henry Ward Beecher.

Echium candicans

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Understanding

16 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Art Gift, Colours, Flowers, Honey Bee, insects, Photography, Quotes

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

art gift, art gifts, art print, deviantart, Flowers, honeybee, photography, quotes, sunflower


“The growth of understanding follows an ascending spiral rather than a straight line” Joanna Field

“The growth of understanding follows an ascending spiral rather than a straight line”
Joanna Field

Sunflower

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RELATED ARTICLES :

Sunflowers Part 1 (meticulousmick.wordpress.com)

Bee boles and skeps

14 Monday Oct 2013

Posted by Brigid Jackson in Crafts, Garden Creatures, Gardens, Honey Bee, insects

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Bee, Bee boles, Bee skep, Beehive, garden, history, home, honeybee, insect, Lost gardens of Heligan, Middle Ages, organic


A Peep into the world of Bee boles

A Peep into the world of Bee boles

These Bee-boles are part of a large wall with 15 vaulted chambers to house bees - the forerunner of modern beehives - bees were very important to gardens as they pollinated the plants and supplied honey and wax.

These Bee-boles are part of a large wall with 15 vaulted chambers to house bees – the forerunner of modern beehives – bees were very important to gardens as they pollinated the plants and supplied honey and wax.

For centuries, beekeepers have used “skeps,” carefully designed domed baskets, to house their hives. Bees need a clean, dry place to make a home

For centuries, beekeepers have used “skeps,” carefully designed domed baskets, to house their hives. Bees need a clean, dry place to make a home

Skeps, which are baskets placed open-end-down, have been used for about 2000 years. Initially they were made from wicker plastered with mud and dung but from the Middle Ages they were made of straw. In northern and western Europe, skeps were made of coils of grass or straw. In its simplest form, there is a single entrance at the bottom of the skep. Again, there is no internal structure provided for the bees and the colony must produce its own honeycomb, which is attached to the inside of the skep.

Lost Gardens of Heligan

How to make a Bee skep

 

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