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| The question is for those who grow bamboo in their gardens and live in areas where chilli thrips have been active such as Florida or South Texas. I have chilli thrips damage on several plants in my San Antonio, Texas garden and was considering replacing some of those plants with clumping bamboo. Before I do I'm wondering if bamboo might be immune or resistant to chilli thrips.
The site linked below always opens to the management section. If interested in the subject you can scroll up and down for more information. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Chilli thrips ...
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by kentuck_8b __ (My Page) on Thu, Oct 25, 12 at 21:11
| As far as I know, bamboo has no pests that do damage to the plant. I have been growing it for years and have dozens of varieties and none have ever had any type of pest. Even deer do not eat my bamboo although I have heard others state that deer will nibble on theirs. Try one of the Bambusas. Kt |
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| In my experience, bamboos can have aphids, which do no real damage, and bamboo mites, which can damage the appearance of the leaves, but do not damage the plant otherwise. If I had to guess, I'd say that thrips are unlikely to be a concern. |
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| Kentuck and Kudzu, thank you for your replies. Sounds good. Kt, interesting that you mention Bambusas. I haven't done any research on type of bamboos, but am assuming that's a non running class of bamboos. I fell in love with Bambusa oldhamii seen at a San Antonio garden tour in September. Any comments on this variety? The home owner said her clumps were planted 2 1/2 years ago and had grown fast. She has an irrigation line running to them. I would suspect that bamboos would take a fair amount of water to get them started. Would you say they are fairly drought tolerant once established? This will be my first foray into bamboos so there are lots of questions. One problem will be finding them. I don't remember seeing much offered at local nurseries, but maybe that's because I wasn't looking for them. Here's a photo I took of Bambusa oldhamii. I loved the look of the canes and the tree shape. I'll be using them along the fence line. Any suggestions on varieties to watch for? It would be fun to have more than one variety. |
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| Uh oh, just looked up Bambusa oldhamii and find it's a giant timber bamboo up to 55 ft tall and will only take temps down to 21. We get in the mid teens sometime plus I don't know if my 1/4 acre city lot will take that large a plant. The place where I saw them is in the down town area that stays warmer, although the yard wasn't very large. Guess I have a lot of research to do. |
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| I mentioned liking the tree shape of the bamboo pictured above, but if anyone wants to make some suggestions (which would be appreciated) I think I'd like an upright variety that doesn't get too huge. At this point I like the airy foliage and interesting culms of bamboo. |
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- Posted by kentuck_8b __ (My Page) on Fri, Oct 26, 12 at 22:08
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| Oh wow Kt -- thanks for all the photos! Bambusa eutuldoides 'Viridivittata' and Bambusa pervariabilis 'Viridistriatus' are very ornamental and ornamental is what I'm into. But where to find them? I looked on line and see that Caldwell Nursery carries them. They don't ship, but shipping costs would probably be very expensive for a decent size plant anyway. I might check and see if a local nursery could order certain varieties with their spring orders. Still have a lot of looking to do. Thanks for your help.
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- Posted by kentuck_8b __ (My Page) on Fri, Oct 26, 12 at 23:09
| I bought mine from Tropical Bamboo Nursery in Florida, but I have had great luck buying bamboo from a few other bamboo nurseries also, such as Tradewinds Bamboo Nursery in Oregon. Both have websites that you can order from. I generally order smaller plants to save on shipping and overall cost but the Bambusas seem to like it here and grow really fast to reach large size. I just sold my last potted Sunburst Bamboo. It will be several months, or this time next year, before I will possibly have another(also B. eutuldoides). I have a waiting list for these two bamboos and my existing plants are quite depleted. Kt |
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- Posted by kentuck_8b __ (My Page) on Fri, Oct 26, 12 at 23:13
| Oh, and a smaller variety of a bamboo with yellow culms striped with green, is B. multiplex 'Al Karr'. It is smaller than the other two mentioned but it gets the sooty mold sometimes which makes the culms look a little dirty but it is a more common plant and will be easier to find and cheaper. Kt |
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