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Protecting Your Flowers: The Battle of the Bugs 
 
by Kealoha Wells July 29, 2005

The Battle Plan

Most gardeners spend good amounts of money, time, and energy in the Battle of the Bugs. No one appreciates their favorite flower bed becoming an all-you-can-eat-buffet line for the invading army of miniature munching monsters. Of course, no one wants to nuke the enemy with the big P-Bomb either, destroying the land along with the occupiers. And pesticides do just that. It’s best to follow the excellent rule of engagement: know your enemy.

No More Free Food

If it’s a new garden you are starting, it’s likely the enemy was entrenched long before you set your sights on that piece of land and he considers it his territory. The best thing to do at this point is to starve him out. Yank up everything in the territory you are now claiming as your own, and then be patient. Yes, resist the urge to begin colonizing your new patch of paradise for just a few weeks. Otherwise, the original occupants will simply view your seeds or precious seedlings as a new food source.

Take the Offensive

What’s that you say? Your instincts drive you to the offensive, you cannot passively wait for them to gather up their numbers and make an exodus, in search of new sustenance? Then by all means take action; visit your new land on a regular basis, armed with your trowel, and evict them by the masses!

Recruit Fighters

When it’s time to begin setting up your colonies, you will want to set up an army of mighty warrior bugs to defend them. The best way to recruit the beneficial flies, ladybugs, beetles, bees, and wasps that will fight on your behalf is to offer them a steady and luxurious supply of the rations they prefer, giving them an easy lifestyle in exchange for the protection. Many of them seem to enjoy small, flowering plants. Members of the mint and daisy families seem to be quite popular. So do the flowering blossoms of Chinese cabbage, radishes, and broccoli. Parsley, which produces small white or yellow flowers in its second year, also attracts the laborious predatory flies and parasitic wasps you are seeking to employ. Parsley is also a self-seeder and will happily be fruitful and multiply.

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