04/22/2020
Grubs, insecticide (neocontinids) and bees: you wouldn’t think how you treat grubs would affect bees-
This will be unpopular but I will share anyway: moles burrow under your lawn looking for grubs and other insects. It makes your lawn look crappy. I have the luxuries of a curious streak and a tolerant husband, so I decided to let nature take its course. Moles tore through my back yard. The next spring the grubs we’re gone where the tunnels formed. Bugleweed (native to Europe, easily removed and crowded out), common blue violet (native to North America), and some fescue replaced the damage. Another patch of grubs formed last fall because I have not been applying milky spore or parasitic nematodes. Skunks, raccoons and possums have been feasting through there. The robins have been attacking the area but I suspect these larva are too deep for them as of yet. Maybe the moles will be back. In the end, I’m experimenting away from the lawn monoculture toward floral diversity. I realize I may not like some plants or pests, but in the long run they may help the cycle of life in my back yard.
https://ag.umass.edu/home-lawn-garden/fact-sheets/grub-control-in-lawns-neonicotinoids-bees
A disturbing trend observed the last several years is the rapid and dramatic decline of honeybee populations. While most enjoy honey and are familiar with beekeeping as a hobby, it may be less well known that healthy honeybees along with various native bee species are an essential part of agricultur...