But don't take our word for it... see for yourself in Madeleine's YouTube debut...
Maddy is officially a toddler, as she has been refining her newfound walking skills over the past week. Yesterday was the first day she's been walking more than crawling. I think it's a little hard for her to slow down a bit from the sprinting crawl she perfected, but she's already starting to pick up speed now that she's on her feet. But don't take our word for it... see for yourself in Madeleine's YouTube debut...
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The birch tree in our front yard consistently gets infested with aphids every year, and this year it was hit hard. The aphids suck juices from the leaves and excrete a colorless sticky honeydew. That attracts ants and causes growth of a fungus called "sooty mold" to grow on the leaves. So we have ants marching up the trunk and when we walk across our lawn the soles of our shoes become covered with sticky leaves. It's particularly annoying this year because we just got a little play structure for Maddy to play on under the tree. The tree does not seem to be greatly stressed, but aphids could eventually kill it. In addition to the ants and aphids, we noticed a whole bunch of other strange bugs crawling on the tree (as shown in the photo). After some research, we found that these were lady beetles (also known as ladybugs) in a larva stage. Wikipedia has some good pictures of the various stages (early larva, mid-larva, pupal, and adult), all of which we have seen on our tree. They showed up because they are predators of aphids. In addition to letting the lady beetles do their thing, we are doing our part to combat the aphids. We borrowed a power washer and have been spraying the leaves with water from our rooftop and from the top of a ladder. This knocks many of the aphids off the leaves, and seems to be washing some of the honeydew and mold off. We tried adding a castille soap additive (which will kill aphids on contact), but we couldn't get the power washer to spray that with enough velocity for some reason. While spraying a big plume of water into the tree from my rooftop with a pistol wand feels almost like I'm acting out a scene fromGhostbusters, it gets old pretty quickly (particularly when the wind starts blowing the water right back at me). We've done it once a weekend for the last three weeks, and hear that six weeks may do the trick. Now that we have a plan, we hope to jump on the aphids early next year and head off the problem before it gets bad. |
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