April 23, 2015

April 21, 2015

I saw maples in bloom today!  I have a feeling that next week it will be spring in a hurry!  Oops – it is already next week and beyond!

This might be IPM for Christmas tree growers, not the trees. Remember that ticks can be out whenever the temperatures are above freezing.  They might be hungry after the long winter, so protect yourself.

I’m seeing lots of winter injury – mostly browning and some broken limbs – although not specifically on Christmas trees.  It may keep progressing as the days warm up.  Check buds to see if they are alive or dead.  Also some vole damage on trunks of ornamentals.

I bet you need a new copy of the Cornell Pest Management Guide for Commercial Production and Maintenance of Trees and Shrubs!  This year you can get hardcopy, online or a bundle of both from the Cornell Bookstore.

Checking your soil temperatures?  Probably not  – but when soil temperatures are consistently 50F, white pine weevil adults emerge and within a week are laying eggs – says Sarah Pickel of the PA Dept of Ag.  GDD range is 7-58 so it is time to pay attention.

Pales weevil is another early emerging pest – if you grow pines and have fresh stumps for them to lay eggs in (I’m glad to learn that ending a sentence with a preposition is no longer considered wrong – mostly).  Removal of the stumps is a good cultural control!

Those 2 insects are gigantic compared to scouting for eriophyid mites.  Sarah’s threshold – if 80% of the twig samples you inspect have eriophyid mites, it is time to treat.

My little evergreens that went in last fall have survived the winter – so far!  Yes, I know you planted hundreds, and I planted 4 but I am still proud!

Have a great week!

March 31, 2015

March 25, 2015

Snow Jobs

Paul Hetzler, Cornell Cooperative Extension of St. Lawrence County

Where agriculture is concerned, dairy is king (or is dairy queen?) in northern NY State. But with the kind of winter we’ve had so far, I wonder if we shouldn’t start producing other crops, ones particularly suited to our region. How about we raise snow peas. Or iceberg lettuce, perhaps. OK, so I’m indulging one of life’s most futile activities, griping about the weather. But for farmers, foresters and gardeners, there is an up-side to all this snow.

Snow has been called “the poor person’s fertilizer” because it’s a source of trace elements and more importantly, of plant-available forms of nitrogen, a nutrient often in short supply. When snow releases a whole winter’s worth (what’s that—six, eight months around here?) of nutrients in a short time, the nitrogen value can add up.

Since air is 78% nitrogen, you’d think plants would have all they needed. But atmospheric nitrogen, N2, is a very stable, inert molecule that plants are unable to use. Where does useable nitrogen come from? Some soil bacteria can “fix” gaseous nitrogen, converting it to water-soluble forms that plants can slurp up. Lightning also turns nitrogen gas into plant “food.” But this only accounts for a small percentage of the nitrogen found in snow.

Turns out snow is a better fertilizer today than it was years ago. There’s an outfit called the National Atmospheric Deposition Program (NADP), which basically measures stuff that falls out of the sky that isn’t some form of water. According to the NADP, the vast majority of snow-borne nitrogen comes from pollution.

Coal-burning power plants and motor vehicles spew out various nitrous oxides, not great for us to breathe, but when washed into the soil, are nitrate fertilizers. Ammonia, another form of plant-available nitrogen, escapes from manure and commercial urea-based fertilizers.

So how much fertilizer is in the snowdrifts blanketing the North Country these days? Because we’re the “beneficiaries” of more pollution than most of the West and Midwest, we get more nitrogen in our snow than the national average, somewhere around 12 pounds per acre annually. Depending on the crop, a farmer may apply on the order of 150 lbs. of nitrogen per acre, so 12 lbs. is small potatoes. Literally. But it’s not chopped liver, either (which is high in nitrogen but not an ideal soil amendment).

Snow-based nitrogen can be a significant boon to ecosystems on marginal soils. In a year with abundant snowfall, sugar bushes, timber lands and pastures undoubtedly benefit from “poor person’s fertilizer.” Snow also brings a fair bit of sulfur, which is an essential plant nutrient. It also can make soil more acidic, which isn’t always a good thing, so let’s call sulfur a mixed blessing.

Obviously, snow provides soil moisture in early spring. What’s different about snowmelt as compared to rain is that snow melts gradually enough that nearly all its moisture gets into the soil. This gentle percolation is in contrast to summer rain, a percentage of which—sometimes a large portion—runs off and doesn’t benefit the soil.

When topsoil is saturated, or as agronomists put it, at field capacity, excess water seeps down through the soil profile. Eventually it becomes groundwater, raising the water table and recharging our aquifers. Nearly all water wells in the region tap into unconfined aquifers. This just means that the water that goes into the ground in a given location is the water that comes out of the well there. These aquifers depend on snowmelt as well as prolonged heavy rains of spring and fall for recharge.

Those who work in field and forest should take heart at the mounting snowbanks, not despair of them. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m headed to the garden with the rototiller to plow up some snow. I

March 22, 2015

March 22, 2015

I did find a use for all that snow – went snowshoeing for the first time near Johnstown last weekend.  Good thing there was lots because I learned 1) I can fall down in any direction – including face first and 2) I learned how to get up again on snowshoes.  Otherwise, I would have had to wait until it all melted and who would write these updates?

While we wait for the snow to melt enough to get in the fields (it’s getting close!), here are some alternative crops to consider (You need more work, right?  Maybe more income?)

Learn about hop pests in Michigan (and we in NYS have the same ones) including how to scout and manage against them. This  Hop IPM  webinar also discusses potential beneficial insects and how to support them.  (Clicking above takes you to a survey page which, when completed, takes you to the webinar).

Is forest production of mushrooms an option for you? Go to Camp Mushroom  this April (I wonder if you get to boondoggle slides for your handlenses?  Who remembers doing that at camp?)

Another thing to keep track of – the growing degree days (GDD) at your farm.  The application window for white pine weevil – one of our earliest flyers – is 7-58 GDD.  No GDD accumulated yet in Ithaca but we are starting to see a few in the warmest parts of the state.

Have a great week!

March 9, 2015

March 9, 2015

My oh my time is flying by!

Thanks to Dave Thorp who said something like –he did miss me but would try harder next time 🙂

Some education sessions in the works this month:

March 16 – Steuben Area Christmas Tree Growers Meeting. Jim Rockis will talk about developing varieties resistant to Phytophthora and developing healthy transplants.  11:30-3:30 in Bath.  Call 607 664-2300 for more information and to register.

March 17 – IPM In-depth for Christmas trees 9:15-12:15 in Mexico NY at the Oswego County CCE office.  Diagnosis and needlecasts and root diseases.  For more information and to register, call 315 963-7286.

If you also have nursery stock (beyond conifers), you might need to know about the new invasive species labeling regulation that goes into effect tomorrow, March 10.  NYS Nursery and Landscape Association created labels that you can use.  And Brian has worked with several others to create Alternatives to Ornamental Invasive Plants:  A sustainable solution for NYS – available on the NYS IPM website:

Clean Sweep NY – a pesticide collection program – will hold their events this spring in the lower Hudson Valley – Kingston, Fishkill and Middletown – the week of April 6.  You must pre-register.

Has anyone hired a commercial pesticide applicator to spray their plantation?  How did you find someone?  I get this question periodically and besides the DEC listing (scroll down to put in specifics), I don’t have an answer.

Winter injury is a possibility again this year.  I’ve heard of one grower seeing it already.  How about you?

Gorgeous weather (it’s all relative) and it’s hard not to have a good week when the sun is out!

March 2, 2015

March 2, 2105

Did you miss me?  Seems like the Christmas tree information sources are on hiatus – perhaps because they can’t get to their trees with all the snow.  But I was in a greenhouse with lots of cool grafted conifers this weekend.  Perhaps that inspired me.

Heard about superweeds?  No, they don’t wear capes and they aren’t good guys and maybe they don’t even exist – but herbicide resistant weeds do and sometimes we find them in Christmas tree plantations.

You can find useful information almost anywhere – Vimeo videos from Cornell’s Garden Based Learning program that might apply to you.  Using Tall Fescue and Know Thy Enemy:Understanding Ticks and Their Management.

Well, not IPM but perhaps useful – Agritourism 101 – Getting your farm ready for the public – at the Broome County CCE office.  Even though you may have had people come to cut trees for years, maybe there are some new ideas here!

Does anyone have a Twitter feed for their business?  I’m learning to Tweet!

Short but I bet more will be coming soon – like spring!