Frequently Asked Questions
Question
Q
How can I keep my pears and apples worm free?
Answer(s)
A
If you want worm-free apples and pears this fall, you should act now to protect them from the codling moth, a major apple and pear pest. Using insecticide sprays is probably the easier method of preventing worms from getting into your fruit. There are also a number of other preventable steps you can take to keep worm numbers down.
- Pick up and destroy any fruit that drops prematurely from trees in June and July, since the fruit that falls us usually infested with worms. The worms will develop into new months that lay eggs, hatch worms and invade your crop again later in the summer.
- Place corrugated cardboard bands (2-3 inches wide) around trunks of apple and pear trees with the fluted side against the bark. This will proved a good pupation site for the insect larvae before they emerge as moths once again. Use trunk bands from late June through the early fall. Remove bands occasionally to check for the presence of fine silk webbing with worms or pupae inside, then destroy the bands and replace them.
- The best defense against worms invading your fruit is to use a registered insecticide. Based on the first activity of codling moths in the Cache Valley area and the temperatures since then, it is predicted that the first insecticide spray should be applied to apples and pears by June 1. First sprays should go on five to seven days earlier for warmer areas of Northern Utah. Check with your local county Extension agent for an update on when to spray in your area.
- Fruit will need to be protected until you pick it or until the first part of September. Reapply sprays based on the protection interval of the product you use (Imidan, 18-21 days; Diazinon, 10-14 days; Malathion, 5-7 days; Dipel or other Bt products, 3-5days).
Related Questions
Other Questions In This Topic
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- We recently replaced our driveway and it now within a foot of two 10 year old Linden trees. Are the trees too close to the driveway? Will the root system eventually break up the concrete?
- Can we grow the new Honey Crisp apple here?
- I have a grove of plum trees that make a nice addition to the landscape, but too much fruit is a problem. Is there something to treat the tree with so it doesn't produce fruit?
- I'm trying to identify the variety of peach my father has growing in his yard. It had a medium-sized fruit which ripened the first part of September, had exceptionally sweet yellow flesh, was a freestone variety with a red center around the pit. Can you help me?
- When should I spray my apple trees?
- Can GF-120 be used by home gardeners to control Cherry fruit fly? How should it be applied?
- Where do cherry trees grow in Utah?
Note: These questions are a portion of the questions available at the master page.
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