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NRaleighLiberal

(60,013 posts)
Sun Jul 12, 2020, 11:49 PM Jul 2020

What fun - hunting tomato hornworms at night with a UV flashlight!

https://www.instagram.com/p/CCkJlI7gxfa/

I was working on my plants today (129 plants - busy year), and noted some damage and the characteristic poop balls - I found a few, but a few eluded me. But using the UV light tonight, I found one!

My new after sunset job...kind of fun!

Not sure if the pic link I put above will work if you are not on Instagram. I don't use a photo sharing site, though - just my blog, newsletter and Instagram for my pics.
20 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What fun - hunting tomato hornworms at night with a UV flashlight! (Original Post) NRaleighLiberal Jul 2020 OP
ugh, my worst nightmare, but good tip Kali Jul 2020 #1
Instagram is the only place I now post - left FB and Twitter last year. NRaleighLiberal Jul 2020 #2
I'm only on fb when somebody posts a link there, otherwise haven't been in months Kali Jul 2020 #3
Instagram is a useful teaching tool NRaleighLiberal Jul 2020 #4
I hear you! Kali Jul 2020 #9
But they turn into such lovely hummingbird moths! The Velveteen Ocelot Jul 2020 #5
no - they turn into Hawkmoths NRaleighLiberal Jul 2020 #7
You're right, I sometimes get them mixed up. The Velveteen Ocelot Jul 2020 #12
have you considered purchasing Braconid wasps ? dweller Jul 2020 #6
no need to purchase - they eventually show up here - but before they do, a hornworm NRaleighLiberal Jul 2020 #8
i figured as much dweller Jul 2020 #11
Made me think of going out and getting nightcrawlers captain queeg Jul 2020 #10
UV light is the ONLY way to get these crittrrs calguy Jul 2020 #13
My dad used to put out shallow bowls of beer worked just fine. RGinNJ Jul 2020 #14
I think UserNotFound Aug 2020 #18
Old Gardening Memory dem in texas Jul 2020 #15
hah NJCher Sep 2020 #20
I hate those things, but birds and chickens LOVE hornworms. I always try to drown them in a bucket japple Jul 2020 #16
Wow, new to me. Both the UV flashlight and the hornworms. Dark n Stormy Knight Jul 2020 #17
Very cool pic! UserNotFound Aug 2020 #19

Kali

(55,006 posts)
1. ugh, my worst nightmare, but good tip
Sun Jul 12, 2020, 11:53 PM
Jul 2020

we use those flashlights to hunt for scorpions

pic doesn't work for me, even after asking to sign up through faceplant

Kali

(55,006 posts)
3. I'm only on fb when somebody posts a link there, otherwise haven't been in months
Sun Jul 12, 2020, 11:58 PM
Jul 2020

never got a twitter or instagram account.

NRaleighLiberal

(60,013 posts)
4. Instagram is a useful teaching tool
Sun Jul 12, 2020, 11:59 PM
Jul 2020

I go live every Friday at 3 eastern for 45 min - do demos, answer questions - fun!

I've retired from the road - no more travel speaking trips for me. Going to start doing webinars on Zoom from my office. I am such a home body (esp at our new location!)

Kali

(55,006 posts)
9. I hear you!
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 12:05 AM
Jul 2020

this thing has just allowed me to be even more antisocial and hermit-like. grocery store once every week to 10 days, send somebody else to feed and hardware store, and about once a week go do a window visit with an old friend in skilled nursing.

oh and the last couple weeks - some trips to the hospital for rabies shots

in case you didn't catch that story - https://www.democraticunderground.com/10181373791

NRaleighLiberal

(60,013 posts)
8. no need to purchase - they eventually show up here - but before they do, a hornworm
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 12:02 AM
Jul 2020

can do a lot of damage. They go from tiny to huge and can eat lots of a plant.

Once they have the wasp pupae on their bodies, I leave them.

dweller

(23,620 posts)
11. i figured as much
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 12:08 AM
Jul 2020

but i knew you had moved, wasn't sure of the habitat in the mountains..

every time i found hornworm outbreak, i always found 1 with eggs too, so removed others and left that 1 alone ..

btw, PBS played the segment of your tomato fest party recently on 1 of their gardening shows, i suppose it plays every season

✌🏼

captain queeg

(10,131 posts)
10. Made me think of going out and getting nightcrawlers
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 12:05 AM
Jul 2020

At night after a rain for fishing. I could even sell them for 50 cents/dozen.

calguy

(5,303 posts)
13. UV light is the ONLY way to get these crittrrs
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 12:49 AM
Jul 2020

They drove me CrAzY before I got my light. Now it's about five minutes each night checking on 16 plants. Gotten over 50 so far this year. The UV light makes them glow so I can get them when they're still small and before they've destroyed much of the plant. The chickens feast on them the next morning. Win/Win

UserNotFound

(108 posts)
18. I think
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 06:51 PM
Aug 2020

That you may be thinking of slugs...? Hornworms usually target the new growth near the tops of tomato (and pepper) plants...

dem in texas

(2,673 posts)
15. Old Gardening Memory
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 01:34 AM
Jul 2020

One summer, my youngest was about 5 or 6 and was into caterpillars in a big way. One day she came home with her two little hands full of tomato hornworms. I told to take a stone and kill them before they got in my garden. I forgot all about it until a few days later and saw that they were eating on my tomato plants. She admitted that she'd let them go in my garden. The way I got rid of them was to get up at the crack of dawn while they were still out. It took a couple of early mornings, but I killed them all.

NJCher

(35,643 posts)
20. hah
Tue Sep 1, 2020, 09:48 AM
Sep 2020

reminds me of when I used to get up early with my cat and brush slugs into soapy water. Often I would return to bed. She had her own cat door.

I woke up after having gone back to bed after another slug session, and there was my kitty, dropping a slug on my nice, clean sheets.

"Hey you forgot one!"

japple

(9,818 posts)
16. I hate those things, but birds and chickens LOVE hornworms. I always try to drown them in a bucket
Mon Jul 13, 2020, 05:36 PM
Jul 2020

water and then throw them out where the birds will find them. Back when we had chickens, I would just remove them from the tomato plant with kitchen tongs and throw them into the chicken pen. They went crazy over them.

Dark n Stormy Knight

(9,760 posts)
17. Wow, new to me. Both the UV flashlight and the hornworms.
Tue Jul 28, 2020, 05:16 PM
Jul 2020

We have too many critters living here in the woods to have much success with veggies, but I have a few tomato plants in pots this year and all the tomatoes have some sort of damage. A friend said the holes, which look just like what I found when your post made me look up hornworm damage, were from turtle bites. I thought that was silly, but I honestly didn't know if he was kidding or not!

Now I'm going to have to get me a UV flashlight and look for hornworms. (OK, maybe I'll make my husband do it. I'm way too squeamish, which sucks in a gardener.)

UserNotFound

(108 posts)
19. Very cool pic!
Mon Aug 31, 2020, 06:55 PM
Aug 2020

I've been fortunate this season...no hornworms at all! I've never used a UV light, but an ordinary LED flashlight works really well, also. It makes the worms "glow" red...

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