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Hairnets To Protect Small Plants


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Hairnets To Protect Small Plants - plants covered with hair netsThis past spring, I had access to 3 two inch gardenia pieces. Just the very tips, mind you. I brought them home and rooted them. Now, I find there are other creatures that love the gardenia just as much as I do. Hairnets To Protect Small Plants - gardenia with holes in the leaves

 

There are several, if not many, hybrid gardenias to be had. I don't like them worth a hoot. The blooms are small and their fragrance is almost offensive. As a matter of fact, I gave away 3 August Beauty gardenias just this year.

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Give me the old fashioned gardenia, any day. The blooms are huge and the heady fragrance can take you on a trip in a skinny minute. Delicious! No wonder it's the old fashioned type that's used to make the hypnotic gardenia perfumes.

The pieces I rooted are from the old type. I have been babying them along as if they were my own flesh and blood. Now, something has been eating holes in the leaves. I did see a weevil once, but that's all. Whatever it is must be snacking on my babies at midnight.

They are young and tender. I don't want to use insecticide on them. Hair nets to the rescue. That should keep the critters out. And if not, maybe they will get trapped inside the nets and I can kill them in the morning. A twist tie to secure the nets in place and I'm done. When the plants are larger, I doubt this offender will be a problem.

Hairnets To Protect Small Plants - plants covered with hair nets

 

And while I'm on this soapbox, I'll make this tip a two-fer. You can get these nets online; a hundred for about 5 bucks.

Now, there's no excuse for anyone to be in the kitchen, cooking, without one on.

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 523 Posts
September 26, 20171 found this helpful
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Four days under the hair nets and a little extra water. Look at that lush new growth....and not one hole.

If this is 'fun', it's my kind of fun.

 
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October 1, 20170 found this helpful

Nice recovery..

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Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 949 Feedbacks
September 23, 20170 found this helpful

This is a fabulous tip and right on the mark~ I have something eating my hibiscus cuttings and I cannot catch the critter.
Dollar Store to the rescue as I have seen packages (how many in pack?) of similar hairnets and that will be an immediate solution. Maybe a larger quantity later.

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I agree ~ Kitchen and cooking and hairnets should always go together.

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February 7, 20220 found this helpful

I supervise school gardens for the Nutrition Services department of a large school district. When a frost hit last week, we didn't have any frost cloth for seedlings we had transplanted just a week earlier. We grabbed a case of hairnets and saved over 300 plants using this hack. Make a 4-6 inch tall donut hill of soil/mulch around each plant then dig the harnet's elastic into the hill, so some soil can hold it in place.

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