How's
Your Garden?
By
Lois Trigg Chaplin |
|
Garden Art
from Maine
This
June I went to Maine for the first time and was surprised by how much
the inland areas we visited looked like Alabama. The land was hilly with
a mix of hardwoods and pines, albeit different species. American flags
hung on doors and porches and the folks were very hospitable. Like
Alabama, timber is abundant and much of the local art and craftsmanship
utilizes wood. Some fascinating totem-like sculptures in Belfast are an
inspiration as to what can be done with logs. These sculptures are
standing in private gardens and public spaces. More information about
the artist, Ron Cowan, and his works is available at www.gardenfaces.com. |

Totem-like sculptures in Maine show what can be done when craftsmen and artists utilize logs. |

Don’t remove big hornworms with white cocoons from the Braconid wasp. They help control the
pest. |
The Table
Can Turn on the Mighty Hornworm
If
you see any big hornworms in your garden carrying white cocoons, leave
them in place. Although parasitized hornworms may be moving a bit, they
are too sick to feed on your tomatoes. The cocoons are of a small,
parasitic, Braconid wasp that doesn’t hurt humans but does kill the
hornworms. The wasps lay their eggs just under the skin of the hornworm
where the larvae proceed to slowly digest the hornworm from the inside
out as they develop. Hollywood doesn’t have all the gore! The white,
egg-shaped structures on the caterpillar are the wasp’s cocoons. Since
one hornworm can eat a whole tomato plant in a few days, it’s a good
idea to encourage the tiny wasps, which are about the same size as a
mosquito, to take up residence in your garden. Let the doomed hornworm
stay so all those wasps can emerge and seek out more prey. |
|
A Neat
Idea for a Fence
and Trellis
This
children’s plot at Merryspring Garden in Camden, Maine, is made from
logs and limbs. It’s a pretty way of maintaining a trellising system
that stays up year-round. It also creates a barrier and gives definition
to the garden space. If you make it tall enough and on all four sides,
it could double as a fence to keep out deer, too. The small plants
pictured along the base are tomatoes to climb on twine tied to the top
crossbar.
Late
Squash
The
great thing about summer squash is it grows and matures so quickly. If
you have the |

Logs and limbs are used to create a trellising system and boundary to the children’s plot in Merryspring Garden. |
| patience to endure
a little heat now to plant and water them, you will find yourself
harvesting squash in October. Sow seeds early this month and be on the
lookout for squash vine borers. It’s hard to spray for these pests for
many reasons: spraying in summer heat can burn plants, some sprays kill
bees and the borers quickly get inside stems where they are protected
from most garden sprays anyway. I’ve found the best |

Mosquito dunks are an easy way to keep mosquitos from breeding in your water garden or birdbath. |
control
is morning coffee patrol in the squash patch. I get down on my hands and
knees and regularly inspect my plants for the little brown, flat eggs
the borers often lay at the base of a leaf or fruit stem. Last spring I
smashed dozens from about ten plants. Another approach is to plant so
much squash there is enough for you and the borers. |
|
Do You
Know about Mosquito
Dunks?
Mosquito
dunks or "mosquito donuts" as some folks call them are an easy
way to keep mosquitoes from breeding in your water garden or birdbath.
The dunks slowly release a biological mosquito larvacide called Bt
(Bacillus thuringiensis subspecies israelensis) that kills
mosquito larvae for at least a month. This is a bacteria specific to
mosquitoes that will not affect fish, plants or wildlife. One dunk
covers about 100 square feet of water surface. According to Summit, the
manufacturer, they are also safe for animal watering troughs. Visit your
local Quality Co-op to purchases these dunks.
Coax Crape
Myrtle to
Bloom Again
Early
this month snip the blooming tips of your crape myrtles and you will
probably see another flush of blooms. By keeping the seed head from
forming and encouraging new growth on the stems, most varieties will
throw out another, albeit smaller, flush of blooms. Do not prune way
back on the limbs, only snip the tips |

Mosquito dunks will not
affect fish, plants or wildlife.
|
| right
behind the bloom. A pole pruner will make easy work of this on most
trees. Then give the trees a little help with a couple of cups of
10-10-10 or similar fertilizer sprinkled under the canopy and water
gently but thoroughly. |
| Lois
Trigg Chaplin is author of The Southern Garderner’s Book of Lists
and former Garden Editor of Southern Living Magazine. |
|