Fresh Dirt - Our latest garden finds, ideas and what to do now.

By Jim McCausland, Sunset Magazine

_MG_2639 Question I have some beautiful indoor plants. I'd like to add different colored stripes to the leaves. These are big plants (pretty much trees) with long green leaves. I think it would be a cool art project to paint different colored stripes (one per leaf) on them.

Will this kill the plant?

Any advice on a paint that wouldn't harm it it? I just like art projects and think it would be cool to have different colored stripes on the ordinarily green leaves. Any advice would be helpfull!

Thanks! —Brian

Answer For more than a decade in Europe, and about 5 years in the United States, growers have painted live poinsettias (pictured above) for the Christmas market. They use a proprietary paint formula. But florists also use paint—a lacquer-based spray paint that is widely available—mostly to color cut flowers without damaging them. Sold under the Design Master label, it's also listed for use on foliage. I personally haven't used it, so I can't give you any personal experience that speaks to its performance on live plants over the long haul—but it's promising. Give it a try and send me pictures.

—Jim McCausland


By Jim McCausland, Sunset Magazine


Coffee1 Dear Fresh Dirt,

I was curious...are coffee grounds good for azaleas?  I remember hearing my Mom mention this.  Do azaleas require any special care?

Thank you for your help.

Patricia


Thanks for the question, Patricia. 

Three years ago we had Soil and Plant Lab run an analysis on Starbucks coffee grounds, since those are given away freely at each of their stores. We were curious about its value as a soil amendment or mulch.

With a soil pH of 6.2, coffee grounds are slightly acid—just what azaleas like.

Salt content is a bit high, but not enough to be worrisome.

Levels of nitrogen (a primary nutrient), calcium (a secondary nutrient), and zinc, manganese and iron (micronutrients) were too low to benefit plants. But levels of phosphorus, potassium (both primary nutrients), magnesium (a secondary nutrient), and copper (a micronutrient) were high enough that, in th words of the report, "coffee grounds will negate the need for additional sources of [these] when blended with mineral soils." That's good news—free fertilizer.

To answer the second part of your question, azaleas don't need special care, but they need consistent care to do well. Mulch them (coffee grounds are fine) to keep roots cool and moist, water regularly, give them filtered sun or partial shade depending on the type of azalea you have and where you live (more shade in hotter, drier climates).

For more information about azaleas, go to Sunset's online Plant Finder.

--Jim McCausland


| | Comments 1 | TrackBack 0

By Jim McCausland, Sunset Magazine
Photos by Emily Bartnikowski

P7240002

Dear Fresh Dirt,

I have a webworm infestation. At least - I assume they're webworms. I've attached photos of some of the webs I've found in my fruit trees. The first two are in a dwarf plum and the third is in an orange. I also have them in my apple tree, my lemon tree, and my pomegranate tree. I intend to eat all of the fruit produced by these trees, but I have a feeling the worms have beaten me to it. I'd like to remove them from my food trees without the use of poison because - as mentioned - i want to eat the food on the trees.

I'm completely new to this gardening gig, so don't be afraid to tell me that the answer is simple enough a monkey could figure it out. I suspect I often overthink my problems. Oh, and I live in San Jose - if that makes any difference.

Thank you!

Emily

P7240003


Hi Emily,
  Thanks for your note about the webs on your fruit trees. I think your trees have spider mites, not web worms, but I'll address the other possibilities too.
  Besides orb-weaving spiders, three kinds of creatures make fairly noticeable webs on fruit trees.

  Spider mites are very tiny spiders. Though you may need a magnifying glass to see them and count their eight legs, their webs are plainly visible, as in your pictures. Spider mites suck the juices out of leaves, giving them a mottled look—and they do feed on both citrus and deciduous fruit trees. 

  Tent caterpillars show up in spring around the time deciduous trees leaf out. They usually make their web-like tents in crotches of branches inside the trees. Common hosts include fruit trees and oaks, but not orange trees. This would be very late for them to still be around.

  Fall web worms usually appear around mid July and keep working through fall, and they make their web-like tents over leaves, usually at the ends of branches. I see them on fruit trees and alders in the Pacific Northwest, but they also feed on willows, poplars, and other hardwoods. They don't, however, like citrus trees. 

  If you have spider mites, blast their webs apart with a jet of water from a hose and follow up with a spray of insecticidal soap.
  If you have either tent caterpillars or fall webworms, you should be seeing lots of caterpillars devouring your trees leaves. To treat them, blast tents apart with a strong jet of water from a hose, then spray with Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis). Your local nursery has it. Bt, by the way, is a very targeted bacillus that shuts down lepidoptera larvae's ability to digest what they eat. It doesn't harm you or your pets—just caterpillars that eat leaves.
  But before you spray either kind of web-making caterpillar, watch an active tent closely and you'll probably see tachinid flies, ichneumons, and parasitic wasps trying to pick off caterpillars. They often lay eggs on the backs of the caterpillars, and when the eggs hatch, they burrow into their hosts and eat them alive.

| | Comments 0 | TrackBack 0

Search This Blog
Advertisement