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-   -   happy squash vine borer day!!! (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=28681)

unless June 17, 2013 03:04 AM

happy squash vine borer day!!!
 
just lost 75% of my summer squash this past saturday, and i was so overcome with emotion that i thought it fit to memorialize this momentous occasion with an annual holiday that shall henceforth be commemorated every june 15th. the celebration will feature all the appropriate festivities, including: screaming in despair, getting borer larvae sh*t all over your hands, frantically injecting Bt into vines and having some squirt back into your left eye, and, perhaps the most fun of all, hopelessly collapsing in a pool of your own tears.

merry gardening and a happy squash vine borer day to you all!!! :love:

Redbaron June 17, 2013 07:22 AM

:?:oops

Couldn't we rename it? Like squash memorial day?

I personally don't even like to mention the VB word:no:

tam91 June 17, 2013 08:10 AM

Would injecting BT preventatively work? On cucumbers?

clkeiper June 17, 2013 09:01 AM

This was the first year we covered our zucchinis from the time we planted them until they blossomed. They are the nicest crop I have ever had. We bought row cover on a roll and cut it to the length of the row and put steel hoops in the row to keep the cover off the squash, and weighted the edges with soil, buckets and sand bags.
I would suggest trying another crop and covering it until the blossoms were ready to open. Good luck. Sorry your other crop looked like mine last year.

tlintx June 17, 2013 11:02 AM

I think you should look on the bright side. I mean, your left eye is now safe from pests, right? Doesn't that make you feel better?

tjg911 June 17, 2013 11:38 AM

yep frc will protect against the svb. here in ct july 4th is typically the safe day to plant out all hollow vined squash as the svb egg laying cycle has been completed. i never put out yellow squash or zucchini before the 4th of july. for winter squash this won't work as their dtm is so long that they just can't produce ripe fruit so they have to be covered. i just plant solid vined winter squash and give the svb the finger. :roll:

tom

Tormato June 17, 2013 12:55 PM

:roll:On the plus side you didn't name it the...
"Squash Vine Borer Larvae Sh*t All Over Your Hands Day". ;)

I lose 2/3 to 3/4 to SVB without aluminum foil at the base of the plants.

I've lost 0% with aluminum foil.

Gary

crmauch June 17, 2013 01:27 PM

[QUOTE=Tormato;356878]
I lose 2/3 to 3/4 to SVB without aluminum foil at the base of the plants.

I've lost 0% with aluminum foil.
[/QUOTE]

How do you apply the aluminum foil?

Thanks

Chris

Tormato June 17, 2013 02:07 PM

Chris,

Tear off a (roughly) 12" x 12" piece.

From the middle of one side, cut the foil to the center of the square.

Open the cut wide enough to slip the foil around the stem, so the stem is at the end of the cut at the middle of the square.

Overlap the cuts, and work the foil so it is snug to the stem and raised up about 2" also at the stem. It should look like a little vocano.

A small amount of soil over the foil just at the outer base keeps the wind from moving it.

Gary

halleone June 17, 2013 03:28 PM

[QUOTE=clkeiper;356837]This was the first year we covered our zucchinis from the time we planted them until they blossomed..[/QUOTE]

I have always had to wait until after the Fourth of July to plant mine in years past, or it was a total waste of time, and a lot of hair-pulling on my part to see beautiful plants drop dead so quickly. It seemed like I was the only person in the County that couldn't grow zucchini.

I grow my young beets under cover to keep out the leaf miners, because I like the beet greens as much as they do. So I decided to try the summer squash covered up, too. They are just now coming up; I hope it will be a success. Nothing would make me happier than to foil those nasty little buggers (almost said something, um, not allowed).

I'd suggest trying again, late summer squash are better than none. :yes:

Lynn

unless June 17, 2013 05:06 PM

i will definitely try the foil method on the surviving plants!!!

also, would floating row covers do me any good? i planted the seeds in march, and the squash had already been setting fruit for a month before the squash vine borers attacked. if i'd used floating row covers, i'd have had to remove them in late april anyway, and i'm pretty sure the vine borers made their appearance after that.

delaying planting may or may not work here; i'm not sure. i could maybe wait until september to sow. there are multiple generations of squash vine borer per year in these parts, i'm told.

my tentative plan for next year is to abandon c. pepo entirely. C. MOSCHATA ALL THE WAY!
!!

halleone June 17, 2013 05:20 PM

[QUOTE=unless;356913]my tentative plan for next year is to abandon c. pepo entirely. C. MOSCHATA ALL THE WAY!
!![/QUOTE]

Sounds like a plan! I've felt that way often......

tam91 June 18, 2013 08:25 AM

I'm trying cucumbers again, will try the foil. Haven't I heard that Sevin is effective also?

livinonfaith June 18, 2013 09:23 AM

My uncle says he sprays Sevin around the base of the stem. He does it every week and after it rains. That's the only way he gets any squash.

b54red June 18, 2013 12:11 PM

I use a duster and apply a heavy dose of Sevin around the lower stem. It works until extended rainfall keeps washing away the Sevin. I try to remember to reapply the Sevin after every heavy rain but when I forget it doesn't take them long to get started. I see the moths early in the morning on the plants nearly every day.

Bill


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