Showing posts with label cauliflower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cauliflower. Show all posts

Friday, November 15, 2013

Critter Damage

If you are growing broccoli or cauliflower and see anything like this:

Jim's broccoli this year

You have fallen victim to our fall rodent residents. Last year they only ate cauliflower so Jim and Mike decided to just plant broccoli this year. Well, the little critters have decided they like broccoli just as much as they liked the cauliflower and have now eaten most of Jim's, much of Mike's and started on Amy's as well.

Jim's cauliflower last year

Thursday morning we caught one of the critters that has been eating the broccoli. Now to identify him properly.... I know he has a very long tail with little hairs on it and it the tail was at least as long as the body.  His body is much bigger than little mice that I have encountered previously. I can make a guess as to what I think it is but I don't know enough to say definitely.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

What is eating the Cauliflower?

This week is a sad week for everyone who is growing cauliflower. Tuesday Jim showed me one of his cauliflowers that had half of it eaten and lots of black on the rest of it. We puzzled over it but thought it was just a one time problem.

Unfortunately, no it wasn't. Weds I saw Denise and was telling her about the weird problem. We decided to go peek in at the heads on Jim's cauliflower plants. UH OH.....lots of damage. Luckily I had Jim's cell number so I called to tell him he was being eaten out of house and home and he'd might want to come sooner than later or he'd have nothing left.

 
This is what Jim's cauliflower head looked like when he harvested it.
All the black is dirt from the feet of the critter
  
Before I ran up to the garden today (Thursday 11-15), I called Amy at the Extension office to talk to her about the problem. The best we could figure out is that some kind of rodent (field mouse, chipmunk, rat) has been crawling in and eating the cauliflower. What do you know...this picture helps prove our hypothesis.

 
If you enlarge this picture  and look at the two parts of the leaves
next to Dalita's thumb and finger, you can see little scratch marks

Dalita was a great help holding the cauliflower leaves back and we decided to peek at Jim's as well. Double Dang....more damage....one of his perfect heads had been half eaten. We looked at Jim's remaining two and he had more eaten. Triple Dang.....


 
A perfect head.....at 12:38 pm on Nov. 15
 
We wandered around looking to see if anyone else had critter damage. Yep, anyone who has cauliflower has critter nibbles. And by tomorrow it might be more than nibbles. Luckily Mike arrived at the garden just as I was leaving so I could tell him that his perfect small head of cauliflower wasn't long for this world.
 
Since we don't know exactly what is eating the cauliflower it is hard to protect the heads besides just cutting them real small. The two options are:
 
  1) Make a 5 sided cage with hardware cloth to put over the cauliflower plant.  The frame can be made with wood and  then cover the 4 sides of the square and the the top with the hardware cloth. Secure it so nothing can sneak through where the pieces meet. Once you place the frame over the plant,  pin it securely to the ground to keep anything from squeezing through. This is somewhat impractical for us because it would squish all the plants around it and/or not even fit in the bed properly.
 
  2) Use powdered fox urine. I've never used it but Mike has at home.  Also, I don't know precisely what brand Mike uses either, but here is a link to learn more about powdered Fox Urine if you are interested.  And lastly I have no idea if it smells either but it is organic!
                        Powdered Fox Urine to Repel Wildlife Pests
 
Amy did say that just because we had trouble with wildlife critters eating cauliflower heads this fall, it doesn't mean we'll have problems in the future. Every season is different.
 
         Vicki