Re: more buggy questions

2003-01-02 Thread Merla Barberie
e that week. > > Blessed 03 > L*L > Markess > > > From: "The Korrows" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Date: Tue, 31 Dec 2002 00:02:30 -0600 > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: Re: more buggy questions

Re: more buggy questions

2003-01-01 Thread Moen Creek
Title: Re: more buggy questions Hate to be rude folks but these ain't lady Bugs but a Japanese/ Oriental beetle that the USDA brought over a number of years ago to eat a Pine Bore that had migrated to the US with-out it. We here in WI have had huge numbers in late Sept for years. They ar

Re: more buggy questions

2002-12-30 Thread The Korrows
> But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and it's too cold > for them to be very active, yet year after year, they always do it. The ladybugs have been coming out around here also. Insects are very much connected to the temp, though to understand this relationship we have to expand our

Re: more buggy questions

2002-12-30 Thread Allan Balliett
But why now? there isn't anything for them to eat, and it's too cold for them to be very active, yet year after year, they always do it. Martha - I don't know texas, but our piles of winter lady bugs only started a couple of years ago. Have they been happening there for longer? I actually saw p

more buggy questions

2002-12-30 Thread flylo
Not that we've had too terribly cold weather so far, only some frosty nights, but everyone's insect sitings made me want to ask the list about my ladybugs. Every November thru January, they hatch out in droves. In the framework of my windowsills, around the edges of anything remotely still like