Techniques - Page 32 of 198 - Fine Gardening

  • neem in the garden
    How-To

    What to Know About Using Neem in the Garden

    Neem is often brought up in any discussion of garden pests and diseases, but is it all good? Learn more about using neem in the garden here.

  • conifers in containers
    How-To

    How to Grow Conifers in Containers

    The sculptural qualities and year-round presence of evergreen conifers make them valuable assets in a garden. Planting conifers in containers is useful because they can be easily moved, combined with…

  • rose slug on a leaf
    How-To

    Pest Control for Northern California: Rose Slugs

    Although they resemble miniature slugs, rose slugs are not true slugs at all. They’re the larval stage of the European sawfly (Endelomyia aethiops), a small, rather innocent-looking flying insect. European…

  • whiteflies on a broccoli plant
    How-To

    Pest Control for Southern California: Whiteflies

    Whiteflies are familiar across the country as greenhouse and indoor-plant pests. But in our warm climate, two species of these unwelcome little sap-sucking insects are very prevalent. Silverleaf whitefly (Bemisia…

  • grove of pine trees affected by pine wilt disease
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Southern Plains: Pine Wilt Disease

    There are several pests that attack pine trees (Pinus spp. and cvs., Zones 2–9) in the Southern Plains—from pine needle scale to needle blight to yellow-bellied sapsuckers—but none are as…

  • tree dying due to emerald ash borer
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Midwest: Emerald Ash Borer

    Emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) has gained a certain notoriety over the last 20 years. This pest has been responsible for the death of over 100 million ash trees (Fraxinus…

  • Jumping snake worm
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Northeast: Jumping Snake Worms

    As if gardeners don’t have enough to contend with, an invasive worm is surprising many of us by moving into our Northeast gardens. "Worms?” you might ask. “I thought worms…

  • dying piñon pine
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Southwest: Piñon Ips Beetle

    The piñon ips beetle (Ips confusus) infests Southwest-native piñon pines (Pinus edulis, Zones 4–8) throughout the region. According to the Colorado State Forest Service, “Ips beetles, sometimes known as ‘engraver…

  • pine trees infested with pine ips beetles
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Mountain West: Ips Beetles

    Many of us who call the Rockies home are familiar with the devastation to our forests by the mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae). Millions of acres of lodgepole pines (Pinus…

  • Hemlock woolly adelgid
    How-To

    Pest Control for the Mid-Atlantic: Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

    One of the prevalent garden pests in the Mid-Atlantic is hemlock woolly adelgid (or HWA, as it is often abbreviated). Native to Asia, hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae) can be…