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Mite fever...
Amateur Gardening|May 27, 2023
Bob explains how you can protect your greenhouse crops in hot weather if they fall prey to red spider mites
- Bob Flowerdew
Mite fever...

THE giveaway is that your plants undercover start to look pale, with a sort of sickly yellowing. Look closer, and you may see that each leaf has a multitude of tiny pin pricks. If you have excellent eyesight, you may be able to see tiny critters moving around. These are not red but buff-looking – a bit like minuscule spiders. But they are not spiders: rather, they are red spider mites. The confirmatory sign is fine cob webbing over the youngest shoots of plants.

These pests are mainly a problem when the weather is hot and dry, and less so in a cold, wet year. In very warm summers, they may even bother plants outdoors, particularly if those plants were started undercover and carried the pests out with them. They are mostly a nuisance undercover, though, and will spread on to most plants.

Dit verhaal komt uit de May 27, 2023 editie van Amateur Gardening.

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Mite fever...
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Dit verhaal komt uit de May 27, 2023 editie van Amateur Gardening.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

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