The Helping Friendly Gardener

The Helping Friendly Gardener Food focused landscape design, pruning, gardening lessons offered by a professional horticulturist

Please note... We are a mobile business and do not have a physical location.

07/27/2022

For every 1 pest insect species, there are roughly 1700 beneficial insect species.
If there is a high diversity of insects in your garden, then no one pest species can ever cause excessive damage.

The ultimate pest management strategy is to attract as many predatory insects to your yard as possible.
They will eat aphids all day for free.

By allowing some aphids to exist somewhere in your garden, predatory insects like ladybugs, hover flies, lacewing, predatory wasps and more are attracted and incentivized to stay. If you have zero aphids, these predators have zero reason to be in your yard.
A common practice is to have ‘sacrificial plants’ that you never treat with even the most natural pesticide.
The ideal type, is native wild flowers.
Flowers will attract pollinators, some of whom also enjoy eating pests.
All the commotion of the pollinators will attract lots of predatory insects.
If those predators find some good food, like a bunch of aphids on a flower, they will want to stay in your yard. If they’re really happy, they may even choose to lay their eggs there, which means you’ll have even better protection next year.

By picturing the food web, this process can become more clear:

Pests insects, that feed directly on plants, are called herbivores and are at the base of the food web.
All they need to be thriving is for a plant to exist.

Predatory insects, that feed on herbivores, are higher in the food web. For a predator to exist, plants AND herbivores must exist.

If you use a pesticide that kills all the herbivore pests, the herbivores can still reappear in your garden immediately, because all they need to exist is your plants.
But the predators will take a LONG time to return. Because they have to wait for there to be a stable amount of prey available to them.
They are more vulnerable in the food web, because they exist at a higher level, relying on more variables.
Pesticides actually benefit pests overtime.
Huge pest outbreaks are easy when all the predators have been killed.
To build back the natural diverse balance takes time.
Plant flowers, plant flowers and plant flowers.

06/10/2022

There’s only one thing on the mind of this ladybeetle larva, and it’s murder.
At this life stage, their singular goal is to crawl around and suck the juice out of every aphid it can find in order to eventually become the beautiful red ladybeetle we all recognize.
But ladybeetles are not the only insect that does such helpful work in the garden!
For every 1 pest insect there are 1700 beneficial insects that cause zero harm to crops.
That means, anytime you spray a pesticide, the larger effect is always the loss of all those beneficials.
When there is a garden space with no pests, like aphids, there can be no beneficial predators, because they’re without food.

If you successfully exterminate every single pest insect in your garden, it becomes a food desert for those predators. But the pests that feed directly on plants can still easily return at any time.

The solution is simple, you want to have as many diverse flowering plants as possible.
Because flowers are beacons for all insects and spiders.
Some predators, like hover flies that get their main protein from eating pests, also enjoy a nibble of flower pollen.
Having flowers is guaranteed to attract and support those beneficial predatory insects and spiders you need around.
You can also think of flowers, especially wildflowers, as sacrificial plants. Many plants have specific aphid species that evolved to live only on them. So when you see aphids on a plant, it is often not possible for that species to move to all your other plants.
So you actually want SOME aphids to be in your garden ALWAYS. Let your sacrificial flowers be covered, and that will be the “bat signal” and buffet that will attract the predators. And more importantly, make them decide your garden is a good spot to lay their eggs.
Plant some wildflowers somewhere, don’t ever treat them with pesticides, and don’t cut them back in the winter. If there’s a spot like this in your garden, predatory insects can eat, be happy and choose to lay eggs so that your garden is ultra defended next year.

Cool bug alert!! So the bamboo by the gift shop has really bad sooty mold, which is a fungus that grows on honeydew (sec...
06/05/2022

Cool bug alert!! So the bamboo by the gift shop has really bad sooty mold, which is a fungus that grows on honeydew (secreted by numerous insects, most notably aphids). While trying to figure out the cause of the sooty mold I found an infestation of this insect... there's a winged adult on most leaves underneath a web layer guarding a bunch of nymphs. I reached out to some Facebook experts and included all this info and photos and I got an ID... bark lice! Rather than causing the sooty mold, the bark lice are *eating* it!! How cool is that?! And the web is silk!!
https://projects.ncsu.edu/cals/course/ent425/library/compendium/psocoptera.html

Ladybug larvae are out!! So many people don't know what these little important critters are... there are 4 stages of lar...
05/27/2022

Ladybug larvae are out!! So many people don't know what these little important critters are... there are 4 stages of larvae (called instars) and then pupa stage to get from egg to adult, and they all look similar to this. I'm guessing this is 2nd instar based on the size and coloration. Ladybug larvae have voracious appetites and seriously chow down on aphids and other garden pests. Go get em little dude! 🐞

03/06/2022

Together, as a community, we can grow our own food!

Follow Robin Greenfield for inspiration and education.

I moved a few weeks ago, and took down most of my garden early. Peppers and potatoes moved in their pots. Heres some pic...
09/23/2021

I moved a few weeks ago, and took down most of my garden early. Peppers and potatoes moved in their pots. Heres some pics of this seasons harvest

Harvested the 3 sisters today (and some tomatoes and tomatillos). Homegrown corn is soooo good 😋. Pollination level was ...
07/27/2021

Harvested the 3 sisters today (and some tomatoes and tomatillos). Homegrown corn is soooo good 😋. Pollination level was pretty weak for about half the corn as you can see. The silks came out during the epic heat wave (115-120° for 3 days) so they weren't as receptive to pollen. I hand pollinated every day during and after the heat for as long as the silks were fresh. Still incredibly delicious!

My posts have been few and far between because I'm preparing to abandon my house and garden after 4 1/2 years. I knew th...
07/18/2021

My posts have been few and far between because I'm preparing to abandon my house and garden after 4 1/2 years. I knew the day would come as it has for all my previous rentals, but it's still makes me sad. Onward to the next garden!! Hopefully one of my very own one of these years 💚

It's 110° in Portland today and tomorrow will be even hotter 🥵. My garden is set up on micro drip irrigation so the wate...
06/27/2021

It's 110° in Portland today and tomorrow will be even hotter 🥵. My garden is set up on micro drip irrigation so the water comes on every morning, but on really hot days everything including the foliage appreciates some extra watering. I braved the 102° at 8pm to accommodate my plants and to my surprise and delight my garden has exploded!! Like everything doubled in size in the last week. I believe my compost tea is to blame for this incredible growth... I've always used it but this year I've been on a schedule every 2 weeks. As soon as the hottest weather is past I'll be making up another batch. Worms for the win!

05/09/2021

Today's video lesson is on composting worms!

05/05/2021

Today I helped mama duck get her babes safely to the river, across roads and between homeless camps. The video cuts out when 1 duckling proves difficult to catch but with the help of a stranger I caught it and reunited with mama just in time for the giant leap into the river 🦆

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