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Red Spider Mite?? HELP!!!
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| danny22 2008-02-16, 5:25 pm |
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When I got home today, I saw that 2 of the new shoots out of twelve of
my jasmine looked like they'd been cut off near the soil. When I
looked closer, I saw a little bug - i crushed it so quickly i dont
remember much about it, other than it was small and a rusty colour. is
this a red spider mite? i saw some bug killer at the store that said it
would get rid of all types of mites, is it worth me doing this? if
there was one, is there likely to be loads more? i have looked, both
on the surface and on the plant and not seen anything.
if anyone can help, let me know 
thanks all!
--
danny22
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| Paul Luton 2008-02-16, 5:25 pm |
| danny22 wrote:
> When I got home today, I saw that 2 of the new shoots out of twelve of
> my jasmine looked like they'd been cut off near the soil. When I
> looked closer, I saw a little bug - i crushed it so quickly i dont
> remember much about it, other than it was small and a rusty colour. is
> this a red spider mite? i saw some bug killer at the store that said it
> would get rid of all types of mites, is it worth me doing this? if
> there was one, is there likely to be loads more? i have looked, both
> on the surface and on the plant and not seen anything.
>
> if anyone can help, let me know 
>
> thanks all!
red spider mite are seriously small - barely visible - and come in large
numbers so probably not the bug that you squashed.
--
CTC Right to Ride Rep. for Richmond upon Thames
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| danny22 <danny22.22cff96@gardenbanter.co.uk> writes
>
>When I got home today, I saw that 2 of the new shoots out of twelve of
>my jasmine looked like they'd been cut off near the soil.
Sounds like slug or snail damage.
> When I
>looked closer, I saw a little bug - i crushed it so quickly i dont
>remember much about it, other than it was small and a rusty colour. is
>this a red spider mite?
No, as someone else has said. And red spider do not bite shoots off.
They are sap suckers.
Your bug may well have been a beetle which feeds upon plant eating bugs
- its worth not rushing to kill something until you are sure what it is
and what it is doing.
> i saw some bug killer at the store that said it
>would get rid of all types of mites, is it worth me doing this? if
>there was one, is there likely to be loads more? i have looked, both
>on the surface and on the plant and not seen anything.
>
>if anyone can help, let me know 
>
>thanks all!
>
>
>
>
--
Kay
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| danny22 2008-02-16, 9:25 pm |
|
have done some reading, lots of places say red spider mites are too
small to be seen, and this was about a millimeter long, and have since
seen another. could it be something called fungus gnat i have read
about? i have seen a couple of flies around the room, could these be
from the same source?
the soil in the pot is still damp. it has been for a while since i was
told to water it well by someone apparently more ill-informed than i am,
and as a result i think some of the roots might be starting to rot.
obviously, first thing i wanna do is not water the plants, and let the
soil dry out. would it be worth putting the pots near, but not too
near, to a radiator? im worried these sick little things are going to
damage the only-just regrowing plants!!!
--
danny22
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| Anne Jackson 2008-02-17, 3:25 am |
| The message from danny22 <danny22.22d53f6@gardenbanter.co.uk> contains
these words:
> have done some reading, lots of places say red spider mites are too
> small to be seen, and this was about a millimeter long, and have since
> seen another. could it be something called fungus gnat i have read
> about? i have seen a couple of flies around the room, could these be
> from the same source?
Fungus gnats love soggy compost.
> the soil in the pot is still damp. it has been for a while since i was
> told to water it well by someone apparently more ill-informed than i am,
> and as a result i think some of the roots might be starting to rot.
> obviously, first thing i wanna do is not water the plants, and let the
> soil dry out. would it be worth putting the pots near, but not too
> near, to a radiator? im worried these sick little things are going to
> damage the only-just regrowing plants!!!
Yes, boil their roots, why don't you? That'll kill the plant off PDQ.
--
AnneJ
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine
when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty
is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross quotes (Swiss-American psychiatrist and author )
| |
| Charlie Pridham 2008-02-17, 3:25 am |
| In article <danny22.22d53f6@gardenbanter.co.uk>,
danny22.22d53f6@gardenbanter.co.uk says...
>
> have done some reading, lots of places say red spider mites are too
> small to be seen, and this was about a millimeter long, and have since
> seen another. could it be something called fungus gnat i have read
> about? i have seen a couple of flies around the room, could these be
> from the same source?
>
> the soil in the pot is still damp. it has been for a while since i was
> told to water it well by someone apparently more ill-informed than i am,
> and as a result i think some of the roots might be starting to rot.
> obviously, first thing i wanna do is not water the plants, and let the
> soil dry out. would it be worth putting the pots near, but not too
> near, to a radiator? im worried these sick little things are going to
> damage the only-just regrowing plants!!!
>
>
>
>
>
Keep the jasmine as far from the radiator as you can get it, not many
plants thrive in the dry air of a centrally heated house so it will be
worth standing it on a pebble tray and keep some water in that to make
the air around the plant more humid (do not let the pot sit in the water)
We still do not know what sort of jasmine it is, I ask because there are
quite a few jasmines and many more plants which get called jasmine but
are in fact not! it makes a huge difference to the advice.
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea
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| danny22 2008-02-17, 9:25 am |
|
its jasmine polyanthum. my concern, anne, was to dry the compost, not
boil the roots as you so sarcastically said. some of us are still
learning.
either way, the plants are out of direct sunlight and ill let the
compost dry off before watering again. some people suggest putting
potatoe lumps on the soil for a few hours to draw any larvae of the
soil to identify if it is fungus gnat. anyone had experience of doing
this? and if so did it work?
--
danny22
| |
| Anne Jackson 2008-02-17, 1:25 pm |
| The message from danny22 <danny22.22dfcb6@gardenbanter.co.uk> contains
these words:
> its jasmine polyanthum. my concern, anne, was to dry the compost,
> not boil the roots as you so sarcastically said. some of us are
> still learning.
It matters not a whit what your intentions were, the result would
be the same!
What amazes me is the fact that some people don't bother to find
out what a plant's requirements are, _before_ problems arise!
> either way, the plants are out of direct sunlight and ill let the
> compost dry off before watering again. some people suggest putting
> potatoe lumps on the soil for a few hours to draw any larvae of the
> soil to identify if it is fungus gnat. anyone had experience of doing
> this? and if so did it work?
I've never had to, so can't advise...
--
AnneJ
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine
when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty
is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross quotes (Swiss-American psychiatrist and author )
| |
|
| On 17/2/08 18:13, in article 313030303432363047B8794C13@zetnet.co.uk, "Anne
Jackson" <amygdala@zetnet.co.uk> wrote:
> The message from danny22 <danny22.22dfcb6@gardenbanter.co.uk> contains
> these words:
>
>
>
> It matters not a whit what your intentions were, the result would
> be the same!
>
> What amazes me is the fact that some people don't bother to find
> out what a plant's requirements are, _before_ problems arise!
I'm afraid one of the problems - especially for beginners - is that they see
a lovely plant, want to own it but all too often, can't find a member of
staff to tell them how to look after it. Too many garden centres are just
plant supermarkets and you probably wouldn't ask the girl at the Tesco
checkout how to cook your monkfish - or not with any expectation of expert
help!
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
| |
| Anne Jackson 2008-02-17, 9:25 pm |
| The message from Sacha <sacha@nowhere.myzen.co.uk> contains these words:
> On 17/2/08 18:13, "Anne Jackson" <amygdala@zetnet.co.uk> wrote:
[color=darkred]
> I'm afraid one of the problems - especially for beginners - is that
> they see a lovely plant, want to own it but all too often, can't find
> a member of staff to tell them how to look after it. Too many garden
> centres are just plant supermarkets and you probably wouldn't ask the
> girl at the Tesco checkout how to cook your monkfish - or not with any
> expectation of expert help!
That is true, but with access to the Internet, all the necessary advice
on the care of house plants is there at your fingertips, as it were...
--
AnneJ
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine
when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty
is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross quotes (Swiss-American psychiatrist and author )
| |
| Charlie Pridham 2008-02-18, 3:25 am |
| In article <danny22.22dfcb6@gardenbanter.co.uk>,
danny22.22dfcb6@gardenbanter.co.uk says...
>
> its jasmine polyanthum. my concern, anne, was to dry the compost, not
> boil the roots as you so sarcastically said. some of us are still
> learning.
>
> either way, the plants are out of direct sunlight and ill let the
> compost dry off before watering again. some people suggest putting
> potatoe lumps on the soil for a few hours to draw any larvae of the
> soil to identify if it is fungus gnat. anyone had experience of doing
> this? and if so did it work?
>
>
>
>
>
OK, Jasmine polyanthum is all but indistructable, neither red spider nor
fungus knats are eating the stems, if that was a clean cut then it was
probably a slug if it was discoloured near the break probably fungal,
keep the plant cool and light, give water when dry but do not leave stood
in water and keep your fingers crossed that the roots have not been
damaged by the waterlogging
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea
| |
|
| On 18/2/08 03:21, in article 313030303432363047B8F9D450@zetnet.co.uk, "Anne
Jackson" <amygdala@zetnet.co.uk> wrote:
> The message from Sacha <sacha@nowhere.myzen.co.uk> contains these words:
>
>
> That is true, but with access to the Internet, all the necessary advice
> on the care of house plants is there at your fingertips, as it were...
Indeed and the same could be said for gardening, in which case urg becomes
redundant. But actually 'talking' to people with experience is so valuable,
IMO. Some of the advice is conflicting on the internet and on here and
reading the internet alone, you have no idea how much is simply gleaned from
others and stuck onto a site. Here, you might get conflicting advice but at
least you know it's real experiences and can sift through it to make your
own mind up. The people I feel sorriest for on urg are those who come here
expecting failsafe answers to every garden query, as if gardening were an
exact science! There are so many variables at work in gardening - not least
the gardener! - that it makes it all the more fascinating.
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
| |
| Cat(h) 2008-02-18, 9:25 am |
| On Feb 18, 3:21=A0am, Anne Jackson <amygd...@zetnet.co.uk> wrote:
> The message from Sacha <sa...@nowhere.myzen.co.uk> contains these words:
>
>
>
>
>
[color=darkred]
>
>
>
>
> That is true, but with access to the Internet, all the necessary advice
> on the care of house plants is there at your fingertips, as it were...
>
Well, this guy tried to do just that - ask a question on an internet
forum and obtain advice - and got his nose cut off...
Many people buy a plant, or are presented with a plant, and rely on
the advice on the label, and why wouldn't they?
Trouble is, I have often seen very different house plants in stores
(not necessarily garden centres, who seem a little better) bearing
exactly the same label with the same generic advice.
Some of us are still feeling our way around gardening, you know ;-)
Cat(h)
| |
| Anne Jackson 2008-02-18, 1:25 pm |
| The message from "Cat(h)" <cathy_ie@yahoo.com> contains these words:
> Well, this guy tried to do just that - ask a question on an internet
> forum and obtain advice - and got his nose cut off...
Why is it considered easier to ask in a forum that to use a search engine
to find the answer oneself, though? Laziness?
> Many people buy a plant, or are presented with a plant, and rely on
> the advice on the label, and why wouldn't they?
> Trouble is, I have often seen very different house plants in stores
> (not necessarily garden centres, who seem a little better) bearing
> exactly the same label with the same generic advice.
My 'generic' advice would be to let the compost dry out, before giving
the plant any more water. More houseplants are killed by over-watering
than by any other method...
> Some of us are still feeling our way around gardening, you know ;-)
Whilst conditions for garden plants can vary widely, depending on a
on a variety of circumstances, soil conditions, temperature, etc. the
same is not necessarily true of houseplants.
--
AnneJ
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine
when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty
is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross quotes (Swiss-American psychiatrist and author )
| |
| Jeff Layman 2008-02-18, 5:25 pm |
| Anne Jackson wrote:
>
> Why is it considered easier to ask in a forum that to use a search
> engine to find the answer oneself, though? Laziness?
>
Google search (pages in English only):
"Red spider mite" "jasmine" - 692 hits
"bug" "jasmine" - 297000 hits
Why didn't you try that to find out how many hits there were? Laziness?
Sometimes it's not that easy to limit searches to something which won't give
a shedload of hits - you have to know the right question to ask. Asking athe
same question in a forum will soon pare down the answers to a usable level.
--
Jeff
(cut "thetape" to reply)
| |
| Anne Jackson 2008-02-18, 8:25 pm |
| The message from "Jeff Layman" <jmlayman@thetapetcp.co.uk> contains
these words:
> Anne Jackson wrote:
> Google search (pages in English only):
> "Red spider mite" "jasmine" - 692 hits
> "bug" "jasmine" - 297000 hits
Whereas "jasmine polyanthum + red spider mite" gives only 87.
> Why didn't you try that to find out how many hits there were? Laziness?
> Sometimes it's not that easy to limit searches to something which
> won't give
> a shedload of hits - you have to know the right question to ask.
> Asking athe
> same question in a forum will soon pare down the answers to a usable level.
It's never a bad idea to do a Google search first...
--
AnneJ
“People are like stained-glass windows. They sparkle and shine
when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty
is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross quotes (Swiss-American psychiatrist and author )
| |
| danny22 2008-02-18, 9:25 pm |
|
the point, i think, is that asking for help in these forums offers
advice from people who may have had experience of certain problems
before, while the internet is usually a tangled mess of twenty thousand
answers to a single question.
its nice to interact with people and share experiences and learn from
them on a common ground. otherwise whats the point in these forums?
might as well just not have them and use search engines instead
--
danny22
| |
| Jeff Layman 2008-02-19, 9:25 am |
| Anne Jackson wrote:
>
> Whereas "jasmine polyanthum + red spider mite" gives only 87.
>
And "jasmine polyanthum" "bug" gives 187 hits
But "jasminum polyanthum" "bug" gives 393 hits
So you still need to pose the correct question. The point is that no matter
if it's 87 or umpteen thousand hits, the OP got a sensible answer from this
group in a dozen replies. He could still be working his way through Google,
and never come up with the right answer because to most people "bug" and
"slug" are not the same thing, and a search on "bug" would not find "slug" -
the probable cause of the OP's problem.
> It's never a bad idea to do a Google search first...
We are agreed on that.
--
Jeff
(cut "thetape" to reply)
| |
| Cat(h) 2008-02-19, 9:25 am |
| On Feb 18, 7:20=A0pm, Anne Jackson <amygd...@zetnet.co.uk> wrote:
> The message from "Cat(h)" <cathy...@yahoo.com> contains these words:
>
>
d[color=darkred]
den[color=darkred]
e[color=darkred]
ny[color=darkred]
>
e[color=darkred]
[color=darkred]
>
>
> Why is it considered easier to ask in a forum that to use a search engine
> to find the answer oneself, though? =A0Laziness?
Judging from the rows I have seen develop in this forum over good/bad
advice given, I would have thought that the very purpose of this type
of forum was to exchange ideas, experience and provide advice. I have
often asked pretty silly questions here, and been very glad of the
sometimes basic, but to me useful answers I have got.
There is a big difference between being too lazy to google, and simply
not knowing enough to google intelligently. Not to mention the need
to know enough to separate the wheat from the chaff in an internet
search.
I have often googled *after* enquiring here.
>
>
> My 'generic' advice would be to let the compost dry out, before giving
> the plant any more water. =A0More houseplants are killed by over-watering
> than by any other method...
>
>
> Whilst conditions for garden plants can vary widely, depending on a
> on a variety of circumstances, soil conditions, temperature, etc. the
> same is not necessarily true of houseplants. =A0 =A0
Not true. An overly sunny windowsill will bake a plant which would
thrive on a shadier and more humid bathroom sill. I used to have lots
of houseplants, once, and have experienced the differences location
can make by trial and error, involving much killing of lots of
different plants (due to a variety of problems, not all identified).
Anyway, surely, it is no harm to treat the innocent poster with a
little kindness? A good dead rarely goes unpunished ;-)
Cat(h)
| |
| 'Mike' 2008-02-19, 9:25 am |
|
> "Cat(h)" <cathy_ie@yahoo.com> wrote in message
> news:21b251af-40c2-42b9-a91a-f5bf69ac58c7@62g2000hsn.googlegroups.com...
> Anyway, surely, it is no harm to treat the innocent poster with a
> little kindness? A good dead rarely goes unpunished ;-)
> Cat(h)
Too too true. This newsgroup could learn a lot from another I visit and have
just asked a very basic question, which was answered with a superb
illustration. A very very friendly site which is predom American. Where
nobody is 'better' than anyone else :-)
Mike
--
www.rneba.org.uk. The Royal Naval Electrical Branch Association.
'THE' Association to find your ex-Greenie mess mates.
www.iowtours.com for all ex-Service Reunions. More being added regularly
After a lot of trouble www.nsrafa.org is now up and running for the National
Service RAF man
| |
|
| On 19/2/08 13:52, in article
21b251af-40c2-42b9-a91a-f5bf69ac58c7@62g2000hsn.googlegroups.com, "Cat(h)"
<cathy_ie@yahoo.com> wrote:
<snip>
> A good dead rarely goes unpunished ;-)
>
> Cat(h)
I should think 'good' and 'dead' is punishment enough. ;-))
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
| |
| Cat(h) 2008-02-19, 1:25 pm |
| On Feb 19, 3:23=A0pm, Sacha <sa...@nowhere.myzen.co.uk> wrote:
> On 19/2/08 13:52, in article
> 21b251af-40c2-42b9-a91a-f5bf69ac5...@62g2000hsn.googlegroups.com, "Cat(h)"=
<cathy...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> <snip>
>
>
>
> I should think 'good' and 'dead' is punishment enough. =A0;-))
Ahem.
Indeed.
Though technically, a keen gardener that's good and dead can still
push up the daisies.
Cat(h)
| |
|
| On 19/2/08 15:36, in article
d4cfd9b6-b4ae-445b-81b2-fd4602b959d1@60g2000hsy.googlegroups.com, "Cat(h)"
<cathy_ie@yahoo.com> wrote:
> On Feb 19, 3:23_pm, Sacha <sa...@nowhere.myzen.co.uk> wrote:
>
> Ahem.
> Indeed.
> Though technically, a keen gardener that's good and dead can still
> push up the daisies.
>
> Cat(h)
;-))
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'
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