Waste Nest wrote:That sounds so frustrating! Have you tried using soapy water to knock them down, or planting trap crops like nasturtium or sunflowers to lure them away?
Thom Bri wrote:It's been a bad year for me too. I have squash in three different gardens and all three are getting attacked. One is a complete loss. Just today I was out early in the morning and hundreds of them were gathered on top the leaves warming up. Since the plants are dead and dying I just stomped them. I think I will have to take a year off and not plant squash next year.
I picked them off diligently for weeks but got behind when work intervened, now they are out of control.
Kabocha which is a pepo so more tasty to them.
Joylynn Hardesty wrote:Oh good, you have a really long growing season. First, how big is your garden? I'm giggling and remembering the year we had hundreds of the devil's.
On Permies, somewhere, is a post suggesting to plant a trap crop of squash. If you choose this route I would do this in your current garden location. Once the bugs show up, set the trap on fire! Bwahahaha! Then plant in your new garden.
In my garden, I used a neem oil spray. I had to do it on a schedule, or the bugs would get ahead of me. Every 4 or 5 days maybe? Reapply after each rain, starting the schedule over. Oh, and do any spraying after the intense sun is lowering in the sky. The sunlight can be magnified by the tiny droplets and burn the leaves. I waited till the sun was behind the western tree line. Reather than buying a ready made spray off the shelf, I buy a quart of pure neem oil online and make my own. Much cheaper that way.
Now though, I have stopped planting any squash that is not resistant to squash bugs and squash vine borders. That means nothing in the Pepo genus. Bye bye zucchini. Hello tromboncino.
Squash that do well for me... Tromboncino, Seminole squash, and Joseph Lofthouse moschatta landrace. Cucuzzi does good too, though it is a edible gourd. These are all plants with long vining habits. Great for trellises, and better on the ground, because they root at the nodes. More resilience from any damage.
Here are my tromboncino, with squash bug damage, chugging along with no help from me.