Skip to content

Battling beetles

Question: We have a snowball bush about 40 years old, and for the past three to four years, we have been fighting a black worm on the leaves. We have tried Sticky Foot around the trunk and numerous sprayings of insecticidal soap and nothing helps.

Question:

We have a snowball bush about 40 years old, and for the past three to four years, we have been fighting a black worm on the leaves. We have tried Sticky Foot around the trunk and numerous sprayings of insecticidal soap and nothing helps. Can you help us save this old bush?

Keith, via email

Answer:

Your problem sounds like the viburnum leaf beetle. Sticky material around the trunk won't help because the adults of the larvae that eat the leaves can fly to the bushes to lay their eggs on the twigs.

You can start controlling the beetle by examining the twigs for tiny black spots. These are clusters of beetle eggs which are laid in tiny cavities and sealed with a mix of chewed wood and beetle feces.

These are usually on the tiny fragile twigs at the outside of the bush.

Pruning these twigs and garbaging them will remove a lot of eggs. Each black spot holds about eight. But because the larvae hatch in May, you're probably too late for pruning this year. But do start pruning in fall or over the winter. The more eggs you can garbage, the fewer worms next year.

In June, the larvae will drop down to the soil and go into a chrysalis stage.

Starting in early July, if you have bare soil under your viburnums, you could try removing the top inch of earth and burying it in a deep hole or putting it in a garbage bag, sealing it and keeping it for a few months. In fall, you should be safe to dump this earth somewhere in your garden. This should remove quite a few of the chrysalises which hatch into beetles in late July. Any chrysalis you miss will turn into a beetle that can lay several hundred eggs over the next twoand-a-half months.

This is a control method. Some eggs and chrysalises will always get away from you, or beetles could fly in from the neighbours. But it's worth doing because some viburnums die after several years of this beetle's work.

Question:

I haven't removed my dahlias from the ground since planting them last year and they have started sprouting. Is it too late to dig them up and divide them. Do you need to divide them every year?

Michelle, Vancouver

Answer:

Dahlias don't have to be divided every year.

Some coastal gardeners in well-drained situations deliberately leave them in the soil over the winter.

In mild winters, they can come back.

But, like other clumpforming plants, they need to be divided sometimes.

Plants usually show when they need division by producing fewer flowers, smaller leaves and spindly stems.

The timing will depend on how nutritious your soil is and how well the dahlias are responding to feeding. If you don't want to wait until your dahlias complain, dividing every two years is safest.

Anne Marrison is happy to answer garden questions. Email them to her via amar [email protected]