Aphids
Worst in spring and early summer flushes of new growth, September to December, with a second autumn peak.
Aphids are small sap-sucking insects that cluster on soft new growth and the undersides of leaves. They breed fast in warm weather and spread plant viruses, so we treat them early before colonies explode across a bed.
How to identify
- Tiny green, black, grey or pink insects clustered on new shoots and leaf undersides
- Curled, distorted or yellowing young leaves
- Sticky honeydew on leaves below, often followed by black sooty mould
- Ants running up and down stems, farming the aphids for honeydew
- Winged adults appear once a colony gets crowded
How to prevent
- Avoid heavy nitrogen feeding, which pushes the soft sappy growth aphids love
- Encourage ladybirds, lacewings and hoverflies by planting alyssum, dill and yarrow nearby
- Inspect new seedlings before planting so you do not bring infestations in
- Keep plants well watered, as drought-stressed plants attract more aphids
How to control organically
- Squash small colonies by hand or blast them off with a sharp jet of water
- Spray neem oil or a soap spray (20ml pure soap per litre of water) directly onto colonies, covering leaf undersides
- Use a neem-based spray at label rate for heavier infestations, repeating every 7 days
- Pyrethrum knocks down severe outbreaks fast, but spray at dusk to spare bees
- Release or attract ladybirds and lacewings, which each eat dozens of aphids a day
- Control ants with a sticky barrier band, since ants protect aphids from predators
Tip: match your planting to the right month for your region to grow strong plants that shrug off pests. See the regional planting calendars.
