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Old July 31, 2008   #1
KCMO_Don
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Default Sunflower sacrificial plant?

Amongst my 60 tomato plants I have a rogue sunflower with HUGE leaves about 6 feet tall.
This sunflower looks like HELL, with yellowing leaved and so many aphids the plant actually sags under the weight.
This plant is actually IN the tomato plants as in ... touching them, yet my maters do not have a single aphid, worm or flea beetle. We are 100% organic.
along with the aphids there are lady bugs and their larva in numbers too great to count.
Are sunflowers usually used for this or is this just a fluke?
I will try and get picts in a few days.
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Old July 31, 2008   #2
Lee
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Sounds cool! With a year flooded with aphids, glad to hear you have a
trap in your tomato patch to capture them all. And the lady bug larvae are
a major bonus!

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Old July 31, 2008   #3
tlcmd
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Keep the sunflowers. They are good to attract ladybugs, the T Rex of the evil beasties in your garden. They are also great to plant near cucumbers and beans since they can climb on the sunflowers. I've also got a row of sunflowers near my tomatoes and cukes (also in NC, zone 7)
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Old July 31, 2008   #4
duajones
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I have a couple giant sunflowers in my yard and they have been covered with stink bugs lately.
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Old July 31, 2008   #5
tlcmd
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Default make sure they're stink bugs, not Soldier Bugs

Some species of "stink Bugs" can resemble some species of soldier bugs. You want the soldier bugs, they're beneficial but not the stink bugs.

Start at this link: http://www.uky.edu/Ag/CritterFiles/c.../stinkbugs.htm
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Old August 2, 2008   #6
hald
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What kind of sunflower is it? I'd like to try planting one in my garden next year.
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Old August 3, 2008   #7
KCMO_Don
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Default black oil sunflower

My 5 yr old planted it from a seed out of some bird food.
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Old August 3, 2008   #8
elkwc36
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I know a truck gardener on the Arkansas Rive Valley in CO who leaves the wild sunflowers in his fields and says it really works. Guess he has done this for several years. This year we have been so dry I had no sunflowers to try it. JD
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