• Solution for apple maggot and codling moth problems?

    From Bob F@21:1/5 to All on Mon Aug 9 20:04:36 2021
    At the suggestion of my wife's older aunt back east, we tried the below solution this year, and drastically lessened apple damage from apple
    maggots and codling moths. She claims it has worked for her for years.

    Mix together 1 cup vinegar, 1 cup sugar, and 1 banana peel. put it all
    in a plastic gallon milk jug and add water to make it 1/3 - 1/2 full.
    Hang jugs without lids in each tree, more for larger trees. I use 2-3
    for each tree I have. 3, for instance in a tree 15 feet tall and 20 feet
    in diameter.

    I tied the jugs by their handles to branches 1" or larger in diameter
    with 1/4" rope.

    I put up the jugs shortly after fruit set.

    Lots of dead flies and other insects drowned in the jugs now.

    We pressed apples for cider yesterday, and were amazed how few of the
    apples showed damage.

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  • From songbird@21:1/5 to Bob F on Tue Aug 10 06:56:32 2021
    Bob F wrote:

    At the suggestion of my wife's older aunt back east, we tried the below solution this year, and drastically lessened apple damage from apple
    maggots and codling moths. She claims it has worked for her for years.

    Mix together 1 cup vinegar, 1 cup sugar, and 1 banana peel. put it all
    in a plastic gallon milk jug and add water to make it 1/3 - 1/2 full.
    Hang jugs without lids in each tree, more for larger trees. I use 2-3
    for each tree I have. 3, for instance in a tree 15 feet tall and 20 feet
    in diameter.

    I tied the jugs by their handles to branches 1" or larger in diameter
    with 1/4" rope.

    I put up the jugs shortly after fruit set.

    Lots of dead flies and other insects drowned in the jugs now.

    We pressed apples for cider yesterday, and were amazed how few of the
    apples showed damage.

    apple cider vinegar or distilled vinegar? or will any vinegar do?

    i'm all in favor of not spraying a bunch of poisons on the trees.

    i was going to start a cider apple patch out back but i never got
    around to transplanting my apple tree saplings (that i grew from
    seeds) and eventually had to remove them from the garden i had them
    started in because they were going to take over.

    you must be fairly far north or have a pretty early apple to be
    making cider already. :)


    songbird

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to songbird on Tue Aug 10 11:30:26 2021
    On 8/10/2021 3:56 AM, songbird wrote:
    Bob F wrote:

    At the suggestion of my wife's older aunt back east, we tried the below
    solution this year, and drastically lessened apple damage from apple
    maggots and codling moths. She claims it has worked for her for years.

    Mix together 1 cup vinegar, 1 cup sugar, and 1 banana peel. put it all
    in a plastic gallon milk jug and add water to make it 1/3 - 1/2 full.
    Hang jugs without lids in each tree, more for larger trees. I use 2-3
    for each tree I have. 3, for instance in a tree 15 feet tall and 20 feet
    in diameter.

    I tied the jugs by their handles to branches 1" or larger in diameter
    with 1/4" rope.

    I put up the jugs shortly after fruit set.

    Lots of dead flies and other insects drowned in the jugs now.

    We pressed apples for cider yesterday, and were amazed how few of the
    apples showed damage.

    apple cider vinegar or distilled vinegar? or will any vinegar do?

    We used cheap white vinegar.


    i'm all in favor of not spraying a bunch of poisons on the trees.

    i was going to start a cider apple patch out back but i never got
    around to transplanting my apple tree saplings (that i grew from
    seeds) and eventually had to remove them from the garden i had them
    started in because they were going to take over.

    you must be fairly far north or have a pretty early apple to be
    making cider already. :)


    songbird


    This was my early tree in Seattle. Other varieties come much later. My neighbors "Green Transparent" was done a couple weeks ago.

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  • From songbird@21:1/5 to Bob F on Fri Aug 13 14:46:11 2021
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    We used cheap white vinegar.

    ah, ok.

    as a fruit fly trap i use apple cider vinegar and lemon
    juice and a tiny amount of dish soap. it works well and
    it is nice to not have them flying around all the time in
    the house.


    ...
    This was my early tree in Seattle. Other varieties come much later. My neighbors "Green Transparent" was done a couple weeks ago.

    i love a good tart green apple. :)

    is this the apple you mean?

    https://www.wvpublic.org/post/generational-love-little-green-apple-keeps-heirloom-disappearing

    we don't have apple trees here, but i sure wish we did.


    songbird

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to songbird on Fri Aug 13 12:27:32 2021
    On 8/13/2021 11:46 AM, songbird wrote:
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    We used cheap white vinegar.

    ah, ok.

    as a fruit fly trap i use apple cider vinegar and lemon
    juice and a tiny amount of dish soap. it works well and
    it is nice to not have them flying around all the time in
    the house.


    ...
    This was my early tree in Seattle. Other varieties come much later. My
    neighbors "Green Transparent" was done a couple weeks ago.

    i love a good tart green apple. :)

    is this the apple you mean?

    https://www.wvpublic.org/post/generational-love-little-green-apple-keeps-heirloom-disappearing

    we don't have apple trees here, but i sure wish we did.


    songbird


    Sure sounds like it. The other apple in that yard is a "Winter Banana".
    It actually has a touch of a banana flavor.

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  • From songbird@21:1/5 to Bob F on Fri Aug 13 19:13:36 2021
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    Sure sounds like it. The other apple in that yard is a "Winter Banana".
    It actually has a touch of a banana flavor.

    i wish bananas would grow here. well, ok, bananas will grow
    here as long as you bring them inside before the cold weather
    does them in. i know someone who kept a nice collection of
    them to grow out each season because he liked the large leaves
    and plants and used them as a barrier planting. he never quite
    got them to actually fruit, but he said it was close one season.


    songbird

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to songbird on Fri Aug 13 23:21:20 2021
    On 8/13/2021 4:13 PM, songbird wrote:
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    Sure sounds like it. The other apple in that yard is a "Winter Banana".
    It actually has a touch of a banana flavor.

    i wish bananas would grow here. well, ok, bananas will grow
    here as long as you bring them inside before the cold weather
    does them in. i know someone who kept a nice collection of
    them to grow out each season because he liked the large leaves
    and plants and used them as a barrier planting. he never quite
    got them to actually fruit, but he said it was close one season.


    The "winter banana" is a very late apple, and stores well, thus the name.

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  • From songbird@21:1/5 to Bob F on Sat Aug 14 08:26:48 2021
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    The "winter banana" is a very late apple, and stores well, thus the name.

    i haven't looked it up on flowering time but i did
    notice the Transparent Yellows were noted as flowering
    early and that they needed some thinning to get a decent
    crop.

    around here flowering early would be a damage from frost
    risk i'd like to avoid.

    this is an apple growing region but the number of apple
    orchards isn't that big any more. it takes a lot of manual
    labor to properly take care of an apple orchard.


    songbird

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  • From Bob F@21:1/5 to songbird on Sat Aug 14 09:38:05 2021
    On 8/14/2021 5:26 AM, songbird wrote:
    Bob F wrote:
    ...
    The "winter banana" is a very late apple, and stores well, thus the name.

    i haven't looked it up on flowering time but i did
    notice the Transparent Yellows were noted as flowering
    early and that they needed some thinning to get a decent
    crop.

    around here flowering early would be a damage from frost
    risk i'd like to avoid.

    this is an apple growing region but the number of apple
    orchards isn't that big any more. it takes a lot of manual
    labor to properly take care of an apple orchard.


    There are lots of never picked apple trees near me in Seattle. It is
    easy to get lots of apples for cider even if you have no trees.

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