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The Rural Voice, 1998-10, Page 42WARM UP TO WINTER Take a winter vacation at home this year and every year. Enjoy the sun and fresh air all year round. INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED • o +a ti< FOUR SEASONS SUNROOMS l SOLAR GREENHOUSES • SUNROOMS • PATIO ROOMS • SOLARIUMS • WINDOWS • DOORS • SKYLIGHTS Owen Sound 519-376-7966 1-800-339-1860 Visit our Showroom ENJOY SATELLITE T.V. IN YOUR HOME TODAY! STAR CHOICE Choose from 2 great Canadian Systems Get the best picture and sound available with up to 100 channels to choose from from '299 After programming credits APPLIANCES & ELECTRONICS 871 - 10th St. E. (across from Zellers) HANOVER 364-1011 102 Main St. E., LISTOWEL 291-4670 38 THE RURAL VOICE Gardening Where do those bugs go? By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger I don't think there are too many gardeners this year who did not have their share of problems with insects. The hot dry weather seemed to beckon all sons of critters to the garden. We don't use pesticides in our garden because we don't take the time and find it too expensive. My motto is live and let live, yet this year I felt I should be a spray gun commando. My roses dropped their brown skeletonized leaves by the end of June, the peonies' leaves turned black after blooming and my poor rose tree was devoured by who knows what, something that even insecticidal soap couldn't wash away. So I have decided to take a harder look at some gardening practices that will make it more difficult for these pests to survive in my garden. This is the first part of a two-part column on pests and diseases and the organic approach. The first step is to identify the problem. Damage in the garden is a result of insects, diseases, mammals or abiotic injury. In my case I can rule out mammal. The first cause of problems could be•a weakening of the plant itself caused by abiotic injury. Simply put, this is a disease caused by soil or weather conditions, man-made physical or chemical disruptions. Leaf and root systems are affected and, of the two, a root problem is the more dreaded. A plant that has its roots threatened is more likely to die if the problem is not fixed. Your observation skills come into play here. Some of the more common abiotic injuries are caused by too much or too little fertilizer causing either burning or deficiency symptoms like overall yellowing or weak spindly growth. Another culprit could be your house pet. Evergreens are particularly sensitive to urine from male dogs. Protect the lower portion of the shrubs, or get a female dog — although that will not solve the same problem in your lawn. You could give damaged lawns a good watering to dilute the salt content and encourage new growth. Damage is also caused by wind, hail, or lightning. You can't rule out herbicide or pesticide injury if you use the products and fail to read the instructions carefully or have an overzealous neighbour spraying on a windy day. Damage from poorly drained soil can be fatal. There are species of plants that survive these conditions quite nicely so a bit of research could save you a lot of money and work if you plant varieties which tolerate these difficult conditions. This year drought -tolerant choices would have been successful. A lot of the trees around our gravel ridge suffered brown, toasted leaves and early Icaf drop due to the dry conditions. Compacted soil and air pollution also can cause abiotic injury. When I have problems in the garden I immediately suspect insects. Insects that cause plant injury are divided into five categories: defoliators, sucking, borers, gallmakers, and soil pests. The defoliators nibble, totally consume, or mine their way through the leaves of a plant. This inhibits the plant's ability to produce food for itself. Some defoliators you can see while others hide in a web, folded leaf or portable shelter. Caterpillars, beetles, leaf miners and sawflies fall into this category. Sucking insects go after the sap and weaken the plant. Since there are no obvious tears or chewed leaves, the damage is already done by the time the symptoms appear. The leaves become mottled or faded and can curl or twist; leaves and tender shoots wilt and flowers are malformed. Aphids, leafhoppers, mites, thrips, plant bugs and scale insects fall into this category. Aphids