Christopher Hutchins

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since Jul 11, 2018
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Recent posts by Christopher Hutchins

Judith Browning wrote:

Christopher Hutchins wrote:

Joylynn Hardesty wrote:

Bryant RedHawk wrote:Those are assassin bugs, both an adult and probably her newly hatched brood. They will eat any squash beetles that they find, good critter in my book.




I went out this morning, with my soapy water, after reading this thread. Tada!!! My first ever seen Assassins!


Ninja Assassins! Yay! Now, I wanna keep 'em around, so... my neem oil should not be used near them. Right?



I'm starting to think that I was right in my guess that these are assassin look alikes. They don't look like they're spreading out for the hunt or trying to find something too hunt. They seem very happy to just congregate on any juicy bit of plant - zucchini, summer squash, cucumber, or peas.



Have you been able to get a look at their back legs to rule out a 'leaf footed' bug?  Do they all have a curve to their body like some in your photo?

This is why I tend to leave all bugs in my gardens and yard alone anymore and let them work out the balance without my intervention.  



I can definitely try and get some closer pictures, but they are skittish fellows. To anyone still following this puny thread I'm still squishing ad nauseum. I simply feel like the way the congregate in the dozens on tasty vegetation is the answer. But I'll try and snag some for macro photography and post up. I'd feel bad if they were good hunters, but I feel like they'd go to seek more gooder hunting grounds if they were. It's still best if I truly know. I plan on next year adding more, so I must educate.

Joylynn Hardesty wrote:

Bryant RedHawk wrote:Those are assassin bugs, both an adult and probably her newly hatched brood. They will eat any squash beetles that they find, good critter in my book.




I went out this morning, with my soapy water, after reading this thread. Tada!!! My first ever seen Assassins!


Ninja Assassins! Yay! Now, I wanna keep 'em around, so... my neem oil should not be used near them. Right?



I'm starting to think that I was right in my guess that these are assassin look alikes. They don't look like they're spreading out for the hunt or trying to find something too hunt. They seem very happy to just congregate on any juicy bit of plant - zucchini, summer squash, cucumber, or peas.

Bryant RedHawk wrote:Those are assassin bugs, both an adult and probably her newly hatched brood. They will eat any squash beetles that they find, good critter in my book.



That's a shame! I read a little about assassin bugs this morning, and thought I'd identified these guys as look alikes. The proboscis looked like it was meant for veggies, so this morning while tending I was squishing. Hopefully I didn't wipe them out.

Michael Sohocki wrote:I've read about the weird, wretched way that BT was discovered: somebody picked the caterpiggles off a plant they liked, and drowned and rotted them in water--then pureed it, and sprayed it back on the living. They didn't know of course that the bacteria Thuringensis was alive in the syrum they had created, but the caterpiggles sure weren't fond of it.

But the idea's got merrit, by golly.

Would you eat a squash that was covered in pureed rotten humans?



I suppose I wouldn't, but it could very well be mental vs. my stomach exploding which apparently BT does. Having just read about this pesticide for the first time, it seems to be caterpillar-specific. Is this your way of saying that BT should be effective against these guys? Or if I'd been proactive, I wouldn't have them?

Ken W Wilson wrote:They are actually called squash bugs. They can build up huge populations. They’ll move into your melons after they’re done with the squash. I don’t know what to do about them. My chickens wouldn’t eat them. I pretty much quit growing zuchini because of them.  I’m trying some squash varieties that are more resistant this year.



They don't have the flat stink-bug/connifer beatle shape that the squash bug pictures I find online have though. Do you have a more specific name these ones might be called? I haven't seen any damage on the squash (yet).
I've started my first garden this year. Besides my peas getting eaten, it's doing ok. Today when tending I noticed a cluster of bugs on my zucchini. No hits online for common pests. Can you identify these for me please?

PS. This garden is in southern NH.