Showing posts with label Cabbage Whites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabbage Whites. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 September 2008

Spraying those Cabbages

I should have mentioned in my earlier blog posting about Cabbage Whites - see below - that if you are spraying plants with water ior a solution of any sort you should do so in the evening or on a cloudy day. If you spray in sunshine there is potential for burning the leaves. The plants should be thoroughly soaked in the spray - both upper and undersides of the leaves.

An equally simple spray for ridding plants of aphids is to add a tablespoon of natural liquid dishwashing soap (such as Biokleen) to 4 pints of water and using a pump-type sprayer. Personally I prefer to leave the aphids and let ladybirds eat their fill but I'm not in the business of growing prize-winning roses.

Cabbage Whites



The caterpillars of both the Large White and Small white butterfly are known as Cabbage Whites – as, indeed, are the butterflies themselves. The reason for this is apparent once you visit a cabbage patch that has not been sprayed with insecticides.




The Large White lays its eggs in batches and once the caterpillars hatch they can be found everywhere – preferring plants in the cabbage family, Brassicaceae or Cruciferae, (and therefore delighting in the family vegetable patch) but also moving on to other plants when their supply of crucifers runs out. The caterpillars colour warns birds that they are unpleasant to taste.




The Small White lays its eggs individually or in very small groups and the less obtrusive caterpillars are much more inclined to hide away, relying on camouflage rather than off-putting colours to keep birds from preying on them.

For those who want to save their cabbages and sprouts from the effect of these caterpillars, here is a non-toxic pest control solution:-

Finely chop a head of garlic. Put into 2 pints of warm water and stir thoroughly. Leave for four hours or more. Strain through a coffee filter or fine muslin and pour onto a spray bottle. Spray the affected plants – or plants you want to deter the pests from - every other day for two weeks.

Blog Archive