Personal Note: Argh!
Jun. 11th, 2007 08:15 amSomething is digging up my windowboxes full of petunias, and I am PEEVED. What eats petunia roots? (It can't possibly be someone concocting hair tonic, can it?) Why doesn't he/she/it/they go and eat the mulberries that are dropping cornucopically from the tree not ten feet away? Come on, Mysterious Petunia-Root-Eating Monster, clean the walk for me. Who doesn't like sweet, juicy, pesticide-free mulberries? Mmm, see? Delicious.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-11 10:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-11 10:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-11 10:25 pm (UTC)Well - digging in window boxes is usually squirrels, maybe chipmunks. They dig the plant out which, unless one finds it right away, dries out the roots and kills the poor thing off - or they nibble on the roots. Also, cats allowed to run loose are good at burying certain unmentionables in window boxes and other containers, and of course those poor plants get rearranged in the process and often due to the acid and other things that have been deposited, the plants die. I have to deal with certain of these little critters every year. Otherwise, there is a thing called root rot (crown rot) which isn't a critter, but a disease. If the petunias are dying at the root, then something else is getting at them [which if you think it might be root rot, I have more detailed info on that so let me know - c].
Sometimes I have a petunia that just dies after planting it. Just like people, some plants are strong and healthy and some are not. But if the plant is uprooted, I'm really inclined to believe my first answer is a critter.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-12 02:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-12 12:15 am (UTC)on a spring afternoon,
when we're poisoning pigeons
in the park...
Every Sunday you'll see
My sweetheart and me
as we poison the pigeons
in the park...
When they see us coming
the birdies all try and hide
but they still go for peanuts
when coated in cyanide...."
...I love Lehrer. *nods*
no subject
Date: 2007-06-12 02:16 am (UTC)