May 15, 2024

VIDEO: The Biggest Pest For Those Growing Peaches Plums Cherries & Other Stonefruits


If you are growing peaches, plums, cherries, apricots, almonds, nectarines, beware of this pest, know its warning signs, and act fast!

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27 thoughts on “VIDEO: The Biggest Pest For Those Growing Peaches Plums Cherries & Other Stonefruits

  1. Try using homemade moth traps that contain water, molasses, apple cider vinegar, dishwashing soap, and ammonia. I use Langer's fruit bottles and hang them in the trellis system that supports my trees and these trap hundreds of moths of various types per trap.

  2. What about honeybees want that poison kill the honey bees also I mean I can't spray any of my trees I can't spray my plum trees my apple trees muscadine vines or my peaches and my blackberries and mulberry because of all the honey bees I've got and they pollinate it so I don't know what to do I reckon just leave mine alone and just let nature take its course and then she got a better idea of what to do I have got 12 honey bee boxes full of honey bees out there in the yard thank you and have a blessed day and be safe

  3. i think ive spotted these early on my peach trees. i actually found a maggot IN the tip of some trees and pulled it out? Still cut off the tips? Also can you please link to the BT, and preventitive sprays you used?

  4. this was so great – i went out there and really looked and identified some sagging and sure enough found some maggots up IN the branches i trimmed. Its because my peach tree does not get enough nutrients and water and so ill take these branches off spray, fertilize and water better

  5. Great advices … my issue is my plum tree leaves have bunch of holes on them during late spring/early summer and start falling off. Do you have any methods of treating this?

  6. If bagging your fruit, a paper lunch bag closed with a reusable twist tie will put slightly less plastic into the waste stream. A zip tie can only be used once. Thanks for the information.

  7. Thanks for all those tips! Do you know if the borers affect these fruits equally across growing zones? I'm in Zone 8b, and just planted 2 young trees last spring. I removed all fruit to let the trees grow in size this year, but noticed one of them still struggled a lot with lots of loss of leaves … until the chamomile planted underneath started to bloom. Maybe it served as a mask. I didn't spray them with anything, but I do have a little Bt.

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