Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: Wneighbor

Hey there, good to see you too. I want the greenhouse in order to avoid the bugs outside!!!

My only experience in vegetable gardening is when I was up north. I used to spray my plants with hot pepper juice to keep the bugs off. Once I got those big ugly green catepillar type slimy bugs, ugh! I called my dad over to get it off. LOL. I hate bugs.

Here I am 30 years later in the South where bugs are plentiful. I want to start a garden but between the bugs, flies and snakes I’m a little hesitant. I’m such a wimp.

I was thinking a greenhouse might reduce my interaction with the “elements”.


1,245 posted on 02/14/2009 4:06:00 PM PST by snippy_about_it (The FReeper Foxhole. America's history, America's soul.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1206 | View Replies ]


To: snippy_about_it

Some of the OLD (like me) insect controls were:

1. picking them off and squashing

2. Hot pepper - chop and simmer in water, then drain off the liquid and spray. (I have a big bag in the freezer - all the left over HOT peppers from the garden last year - will be using them this summer)

3. Tobacco - either as juice mixed with water and sprayed like the peppers or as dust. The dust also works to control fleas, ticks, mites in chicken dust holes as well as in bedding for dogs.

4. Good old fashioned lye soap mixed in water and sprayed.

5. Mineral or Cod Oil - a drop on the corn silk weekly keeps the earworms out

6. Chickens - they are voracious bug eaters - they will run headlong into a wall chasing a grasshopper or other bug. Just be sure to fence them out of the rest of your garden or you will find that they love all types of vegetables. If you have a portable fence, they will glean the spoil from the garden, eat the grass and scratch up and eat every kind of bug - including ticks.

They all work and targeting to a specific pest works best. Just don’t use the tobacco juice on the lettuce you are planning to have for dinner tonight - should be about a week with a shower in between spraying it and eating or it makes it bitter.


1,249 posted on 02/14/2009 4:26:44 PM PST by DelaWhere (I'm a Klingon - Clinging to guns and Bible - Putting Country First - Preparing for the Worst!!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1245 | View Replies ]

To: snippy_about_it
I was thinking a greenhouse might reduce my interaction with the “elements”.

You are probably right. If you don't like bugs and worms it takes a while to get used to the fact that *most* of them are very good for your plants. In a greenhouse you can control your elements a little more and figure out what's good and what's not. I welcome those honeybees because I know they are pollinating my plants. Yesterday I had my first bloom of the season on one of my scented geraniums!

1,299 posted on 02/15/2009 7:38:59 AM PST by Wneighbor
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1245 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson