Quote from
bob on 25th October 2022, 8:40 am
Hello Michael, you have treated the soil, but this to no effect, personally I would not feed the plant this time of year, and don't water too much, weevils like moisture.
There are a couple of things you could try, there are what I think are called nematodes?? something like that, which predate the weevil, I'm first to admit I know very little on this type of subject, they can be purchased on line, and placed on and around plants, do they work in the cooling temperatures, I'm not sure? but it may be worth a Google.
You could also try digging away a fair amount of soil from around your plant, as this is where the adults would be, replacing of course with new top soil, and adding a bit of ericaceous compost with it.
I dont know the size of it, but If it were my plant, to try and save it, I would dig it up, wash the complete plant down, clean off all the roots using water, and re-plant in a container using say John Innes No3 and some ericaceous compost, and move it away from that planted area, you don't need an expensive container, just a cheap holding container that will do the job until next year.
I hope Lee can pick up on your post as he is the organic expert on getting rid of pests.
I hope it all goes well for you.
Bob
Hello Michael, you have treated the soil, but this to no effect, personally I would not feed the plant this time of year, and don't water too much, weevils like moisture.
There are a couple of things you could try, there are what I think are called nematodes?? something like that, which predate the weevil, I'm first to admit I know very little on this type of subject, they can be purchased on line, and placed on and around plants, do they work in the cooling temperatures, I'm not sure? but it may be worth a Google.
You could also try digging away a fair amount of soil from around your plant, as this is where the adults would be, replacing of course with new top soil, and adding a bit of ericaceous compost with it.
I dont know the size of it, but If it were my plant, to try and save it, I would dig it up, wash the complete plant down, clean off all the roots using water, and re-plant in a container using say John Innes No3 and some ericaceous compost, and move it away from that planted area, you don't need an expensive container, just a cheap holding container that will do the job until next year.
I hope Lee can pick up on your post as he is the organic expert on getting rid of pests.
I hope it all goes well for you.
Bob