Hi! I'm going to be growing a few veg with my daughter this year. I don't want my daughter to become disheartened so I was thinking of taking some steps to prevent pests. I've got some anti-slug measures lined up, but was wondering about flying bugs - carrot fly etc. I looked at the Which? report on meshes etc and they reckon thin fleece is the best and is cheap but not very durable, that Enviromesh Ultra Fine and Wondermesh were very good and durable but expensive, and ordinary Enviromesh was the worst. I've got some thin fleece anyway, and was looking at getting some Wondermesh but at the price, when I suddenly wondered if I need bother at all...?
We'll be growing in a small raised bed and pots on our patio, which is in a small garden completely enclosed on all sides with at least four foot of solid fence or the house - there's a small gap under the side gate, but that's all. So given that carrot fly is reputed to be such a crap flyer, what are the chances of it getting in to the garden at all? We haven't grown veg before, and neither have neighbours on either side to my knowledge. The bed is filled with bought compost. The prevailing wind blows away from the houses out over the fields.
On the other hand, we do back directly onto farmland (although they grew a cereal crop last year in that field), there is an allotment site less than a mile away as the crow flies and the land on which our house was built just over ten years ago was apparently used for allotments.
So, would you bother? We'll be growing carrots, brocolli, french beans, peas, lettuce, shallots, spring onions, tomatoes, potatoes, baby sweetcorn, some herbs and flowers.
Thank you!
Lucy
We'll be growing in a small raised bed and pots on our patio, which is in a small garden completely enclosed on all sides with at least four foot of solid fence or the house - there's a small gap under the side gate, but that's all. So given that carrot fly is reputed to be such a crap flyer, what are the chances of it getting in to the garden at all? We haven't grown veg before, and neither have neighbours on either side to my knowledge. The bed is filled with bought compost. The prevailing wind blows away from the houses out over the fields.
On the other hand, we do back directly onto farmland (although they grew a cereal crop last year in that field), there is an allotment site less than a mile away as the crow flies and the land on which our house was built just over ten years ago was apparently used for allotments.
So, would you bother? We'll be growing carrots, brocolli, french beans, peas, lettuce, shallots, spring onions, tomatoes, potatoes, baby sweetcorn, some herbs and flowers.
Thank you!
Lucy
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