I turned the corner last night, July 5, 2019, and there, right there on the top of virginally white 'Blanc Double de Coubert' in full-on public display, fornicating, yes FORNICATING, in flagrante delicto, caught red-handed (or, in this case, green-bodied) in naked embrace, were the first of the Japanese Beetles to invade my garden this year. Immodest, immoral, deplorable and disgusting Japanese Beetles!
All right, all right. My indignation is false, my outrage is fake, although this Japanese Beetle sightings is most certainly not "fake news." I've actually been expecting them, waiting and watchful, forewarned and forearmed. In point of fact, while I'm spilling the beans, these weren't the first Japanese Beetles that I saw yesterday evening. I had already found one a few moments earlier on 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup', cornered it, captured it, and crushed it under my sole. On the first day, the total casualty count for the Japanese Beetle army at my hands was 6; the pair above on 'Blanc', the pair below on 'Applejack', the single stag male on 'Fru Dagmar Hastrup' and another single male on a second 'Applejack'.
They are right on time, these horrible hordes. Based on a search of my blog, from the very first time I spotted one in my garden, 7/7/2013, to the beginning of last year's seasonal foray on 7/1/2018, they've never been earlier than July 1st, nor later than July 7th, with the exception of the fabled beetle-less summer of 2016. My blog is full of beetles, and I noticed tonight that if you click on the search box at the right and type in "beetles", I've accumulated almost a dozen musings on these hard-bodied trespassers. Go ahead, I promise it is an entertaining side-path through the blog.
Sore from recent marathon weedings of the garden, nursing what I suspect is my first ever episode of trochanteric bursitis, and in no mood to trifle with more garden interlopers after the earlier spring invasion of rose slugs, I've chosen the nuclear option this year. Full-on, no-prisoners-taken, garden-wide thermonuclear war in my garden, insecticide at 50 paces, and may the human win. My sole concession to the less onerous garden critters was to spray as early in the morning as possible so as to spare as many bumblebees as I could, but I'm in no mood this year to stand on the ethical high ground and spend every night and morning searching the garden by hand to interrupt and dispatch Japanese beetle couples in the process of making more Japanese beetles. So this year, I'll spare myself the bursa-inflaming activity and spare you the daily body count, and I will simply report any spotted survivors here later. To my fellow gardeners, ye of beetle-inflicted pain, the skirmishes have begun again. Good hunting, my friends.
Yes, they have arrived here on time as well. Horrible creatures. Several of our trees get decimated each year because they are way too tall to spray. I always think we've made it without them, but forget they show up in July. Sigh.
ReplyDelete