rubharb leaves as a carrot fly deterrent

Started by ginger james, June 13, 2010, 08:46:06

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ginger james

hi i heard somewhere that the leaves off rubharb soaked in water make a good deterrent for carrot fly but cant remeber if you have to add somethink else to it have had it in soak now for a bit an really does stink help please
thought i saw the light at the end off the tunnel but it was only some bleep with a torch bringin me some more work

ginger james

thought i saw the light at the end off the tunnel but it was only some bleep with a torch bringin me some more work

shirlton

Well the leaves layed under the gooseberries certainly stops the sawfly so I am thinking of putting some leaves around any crop who's pests live in the soil
When I get old I don't want people thinking
                      "What a sweet little old lady"........
                             I want em saying
                    "Oh Crap! Whats she up to now ?"

Digindep

Use rhubarb leaves on a regular bassis, first signs of ants and blackfly on the broadies this year out with the spray..no more problems ..so far...
Others on our site spray their brassicas with the solution...seems to work for them....
Until something else comes along I will continue to have it on standby... ;)

If nothing else at least it makes you feel as though your trying.... ;)   :D
Born with nothing
'Aint spent it yet

elvis2003

ooohhh never heard of this before,thanks people will try it!
when the going gets tough,the tough go digging

admjh1

What a brill idea.Do you soak the leaves in a bucket and use the water as a spray ? Or just lie the leaves on top of the soil. Oh and is it to late to protect my gooseberries?

shirlton

I have used the rhubarb tea but couldn't use it where I wanted cos it kills everything not just the pest
When I get old I don't want people thinking
                      "What a sweet little old lady"........
                             I want em saying
                    "Oh Crap! Whats she up to now ?"

Digindep

If it kills everything then the mix is to strong. Not had that problem ever and I use it on a regular basis. Depending on origional mix, approx 10% rhubarb tea and 90% clean water.(any spray bottle from under the kitchen sink and add the odd drop of washing- up liquid= stickability  ;) )
Used it only yesterday, hands still reek of the bally stuff, but if does the job intented I'll continue.
Some of these oldie methods work well, some of you may disagree with them..
my way of thinking is its basically a natural weapon in the gardeners armoury.
Have a great season... ;)
Born with nothing
'Aint spent it yet

Karen Atkinson

I'm sure I rad somewhere that rhubarb leaves are toxic - does this not matter in this case then if you're spraying veg to be eaten?

Robert_Brenchley

You won't get much oxalic on the skin, and in any case, most of us wash our veg at some point! It'll come off with no problems.

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