So, I'm told by my Chatham County friends that planting marigolds around tomatoes will keep pests away. I'm wondering if this is also true for squash, as it appears i may be at the beginning of an issue with squash borers. i sure dont want to lose all this nice squash! marigolds. tonite.
3 comments:
What are the problematic pests? The only ones I had problems with were hornworms and spider mites, which were both pretty easily dealt with.
good question! wish i had an answer. seriously, i have no idea what either of those look like, and would not have even known what a "squash borer" was if it hadn't been pointed out to me. i have a LOT left to learn, obviously. i'm assuming a hornworm would look like, well, a worm? and that spider mites are very small?
I was speaking just w.r.t. the tomatoes, btw.
Tomato Hornworms are ugly MFs. Spider mites are more easily noticed by their webs, as they're really tiny. When I got them, i thought I had a fungal problem. BTW, they dislike water, so start overhead watering if you see them, even spraying the plants from underneath if you can.
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