AT first, I thought my box topiary had sunburn. Then I remembered the washout weather and wondered if they had drowned. But meteorological matters aren’t the cause of their malaise. My box is under attack from a relatively new menace that’s probably already in (or on its way to) your garden.
The box tree caterpillar is a species that hails from China, but in 2008 a clutch took a long-haul flight to Germany and after visiting Switzerland and the Netherlands, a few fluttered to gardens in Sussex and Surrey. By the time they were noticed, they’d expanded their numbers and travel plans, and were visiting gardens across the south, plus a growing list of postcodes in the north.
I’d seen their damage in other people’s hedges and blithely assumed that my garden would be off their radar. How wrong I was. Close inspection of my topiary balls reveals the tell-tale signs of their presence: missing and glued-together leaves, frass, webbing and a mob of feeding caterpillars.
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