Would love to hear more about your use of nematodes and predators next spring. Sending good wishes and positive vibes your way for a successful glad crop next season!
I love how you said “thank goodness I grew all kinds of things”. I fully agree! I also found my customers liked the diversity every week! They loved learning about the new flowers! Plus keeping it to only a few flowers is boring!! Thanks for telling your story. The good, bad and sad parts!!! You’re amazing!
I use Cinnamon sprinkled on top of my (large pots) soil, rake it in about 1" deep with my fingers to get rid of nesting bugs (usually nest in the top inch of soil). Mainly for Aphids, gnats and fleas. It works great for me. I don't know if it works on Thrips. But you can buy a large bottle of Cinnamon at Costco. Cinnamon also promotes root growth so it can also be sprinkled on your bulbs. You can test it on some Thrips and see, maybe? Just tryin' to help. I use it everywhere now. I love the stuff. Peace.
I also use cinnamon as a deterrent for any deer, squirrels or others from munching on my tulips!! It works but you have to reapply after a strong rain. To me it’s worth the few applications and then the critters get the hint
Oh, I'm so sorry for your gladiolas! But don't lose hope! I had exactly the same problem with thrips last year. I grow around 150 glads and they were all destroyed by these stupid bugs! I still kept the corms and over wintered them (doing nothing special). Before planting, I threw them in a bucket filled with soapy water in which I added an insectiside against thrips and other 'sucking insects' and left them for 1 hour. I let them dry and planted them in the same spot as last year (also fearing that the trips might have laid eggs). However, this year they were splandid!! No thrips at all!! I sprayed them once with a 'bio' insecticide just to be sure but otherwise have done nothing in particular. I was a bit puzzled by the thrips sudden disappearance so I looked up a bit more about them. Apparently, they really do not like wet soil, and will only lay eggs in dry soil. Last year was super dry and hot and this year super wet and cold. So in the end, I am not sure if everything I've done to counter the thrips mattered or not. Next year however, I will be sure to water them on most days and quickly hose down their leaves. I am sure it will keep them happy!
I'm so sorry Nicole! 😞 crop failure stinks. Completely understand your pain. I started over 1000 ranunculus 2 weeks ago, and my husband turned on the heater in the room they were stored. So almost every single tray molded. 😭 Thankfully that was only half of them that I had started. You also made me order 500 or so more glads then I planned for spring 2022. 🤣
The excess rainfall early this summer was a maximal test for *everything* here this year. Every rot, mold, fungus, or insect we have was in full effect. Go with the flow, Possum.
Sorry you had all those troubles with thrips! I work with field crops and thrips are everywhere! So yes I think you are right that the infestation came from your environment rather than the corms.
My heart is sad for you . The work you put into such lovely farm . Life is hard and you see the bright side which is what it takes to garden . Forward , always forward ,everywhere forward. Thanks for sharing the downs and disappointments as well as the successes.
We always treating gladiolus bulbs whit insecticide before putting them in ground, we loose some to trips, but luckily not much. But we grew them only for about 5 year's. My friend lost almost all gladiolus last year, but this year was successful for her. Many grovers uses insecticide atleast 2-3 times per season we don't like to use it too much because it could affect bees.
I had a Thrip problem a few years ago on Gladiolus. With diligent application of Spinosad I completely eliminated them. They came in on some Glads I ordered as they are not a native to my area. However, once introduced they can continue to live on corms that remain in the ground overwinter, deep enough to not freeze and kill thethrips.
Funny timing- I received my “What the thrip?!” shirt today! (Along with a FHF tee and an incredibly thoughtful bday message 😍) I feel your pain to the core. Dealing with an insane invasion of Asian jumping worms here. I’ve gone through the five stages of grief over them. Hang in there, and keep pushing through. You are such an inspiring, bright light Nicole! 🌈🌼
I'm sorry you lost most. I lost over vfc 2,000 and this year. Every single one 😔 never had a problem before. I already threw half away and have the rest to dig still. Glad I saw this ❤ I'll dig these treat and store! Thank you so much for your amazing videos!!
I feel your pain. Same problems, with hungry rabbits thrown in for good measure. Years one and two absolutely beautiful blooms. The last two years the blooms would not open, turn brown and wilt. Now I know it’s the thrips!
All my Dahlias were hit hard by thrips. Because I am in California, I usually overwinter them in the ground. This year I’m digging them up and treating them with diatomaceous earth. I’m just a backyard gardener so I don’t have an alternate place to plant them. I’ll probably do them in pots for the next season and try and treat the soil with nematodes etc. Looking forward to Dame Edna next season. Time flies!
Little buggers. I have had thrips on my gladiolus every year I have planted them. All in 3 different properties. I'm giving them a go again in my current garden. They are beautiful when they don't get thrips. 😭Sorry about your loss
So sad!!! I hope the corms are healthy and you can get beautiful blooms next year! My glads didn't do well because we had such record breaking heat, plus a terrible drought! I've saved all my corms and I'm really looking forward to trying again next year!
Even in backyard gardens, too many of the same species in one location will be detrimental to any plant health. Maybe space the gladiola patches farther apart with other flower patches in between? Hopefully that could slow an infestation down to be treatable. Especially when some flowers are more disease or pest resistant than others :)
Nicole, I am so sorry for your crop failure. That is such a disappointment and loss for you. Thank you for sharing it because it is a warning to all of us who grow gladiolas. Best wishes for another crop in another spot next year!
I had thrips on some of my dahlias this year. I hope that they don’t overwinter because I would like to grow some glads next year in the same area. The last time I tried growing glads in a different flower bed, the plants failed to thrive. My husband thinks we had cutworms in our soil. Here’s hoping next year is a better year for growing glads for both of us!
My first year with thrips. It’s unbelievable how fast and sneaky those jerks are inside my dahlias. Would love updates on how you are treating your soil. 🤞🏼
I feel your pain!! 😔 first year for my cut flower garden.... Groundhogs got my sunflowers and tall marigolds. Thrips were all over my Dahlias which I've never grown before. Leaf Hoppers on all my Zinnias. But I still loved growing everything.
I had also thrips on my gladiolas ...planted them arlund trees in my street ....100 gladiolas. Was also sad. I will refresh soil and will choose another beauty ...love gladiolas nevertheless. Whish you the best for next year ...2022 will be a happy gladiolas year for sure.
I see thrips very early on in the season on my roses. Within a few weeks they're gone. The only thing I can think of that is taking care of the problem is, 1-Weekly bt spraying 2-Ladybugs 3-Tons of yellow jacket wasps . I don't let them nest on my property but welcome them otherwise. Just btw, anyone telling you to grow a monoculture is not understanding much about soil health and beneficial insects. The more of a variety you have, the more beneficial insects you'll bring in. Now I do have a massive problem with spider mites. Weekly spraying helps for sure, but it's so bad, that next year I'll be ordering from Arbico Organics to help take care of the problem.
I was wondering what happened to that challenge. What a bummer about the glads!! What the thrip were they thinking?? lol Anyways, hope next year's crop will be amazing and you have great success with the glads. Cheers! :)
I had a ton of Gladiolus planted in my front yard. I had the same issue. The flowers were wilting before even fully blooming. It was such a disappointment. Some made it and they were pretty but it seemed like even the lowest flowers wilted within a day or two. They were definitely struggling.
Hi Nicole, some gladiolus varieties are less resistant to thrips. Robinetta, Alba, Green Star, Live Oak. I’m staying away from Charming and Charming Beauty - In a 2021 study, they came out the worst of 14 tested varieties.
Yes diversity is resilience! Sorry about the thrips, truly are the worst tiny little suckers. I know you will soldier on, and continue to inspire us all 💕
So sorry to hear about the gladiolus. Hope the corms will make it. Pests in the garden can be so heartbreaking. May the thrips go away and never return!
Love your channel! As a vegetable farmer I recommend treating your new patch for the glads with the same corrective measures. Pests move under pressure, and you don't want them setting up shop in your new patch. Maybe plant a trap crop on the infested patch so they "stay and die". Good luck!
None of my Glads came up. I blamed the drought and heat wave up here in Alberta, in May/June, that didn't stop through August and September. Hopefully next year will be better. Although, my lavender loved it.
So sorry about your Glads :( but I'm glad you are giving up. As one of the military mottos says, "adapt, improvise and overcome". I look forward to seeing what happens next year.
Oh man! I'm so sorry, future bestie!! I had been wondering if I missed the Dame Edna update and now I understand. I cant even fathom how hard it was losing such a massive crop that you were looking forward to so much! I only recently watched the video of you planing them and showing the bulbs you selected. You were so excited. I feel confident that you are right in moving them away from that soil. Im sure you will have a great crop next year and your love for Gladys will continue to (dare I say) flower. :)
I feel your pain! 😩I was the one who sent u a pm about losing all of my glads 😔 I’m only a beginner so I had no idea about thrips but I do now 😒 I ripped all of mine up and threw them all away because I just couldn’t look at them anymore! They looked awful! I Felt like a complete failure 😣
I had the same problem with my gladdies this year. Total devastation of 2K corms planted. So disappointed. I also pre-treated my Fred Nagel corms with DE. I hope your crop rotation works for you! I am going to try the same thing. Xo!
Hi Nicole, just happened to watch this now.... thrips was my biggest problem with my dahlias last year, and I didn't think my glads were great either, so now I'll have to watch for thrips on them. Have you used horticultural oil or Captain Jacks? They're both organic sprays, and the HO worked really well on the dahlias. Hope you have a good year with them this year.
First off, your hair looks amazing!!!! Second, I also lost all of my glad's this year. I am in 7A, so mine over winter in the ground. The only problem with that is they all bloom at the same time. Which is nice when you have buckets full of them to give away to friends and family. But then you just have the leaves to look at for the rest of the season. All of the new bulbs I planted had issues from the suppliers, (way under sized bulbs, fingers crossed next season is better). I love the enthusiasm that you put into growing flowers! Thank you, for such great content.
ugh... what a horrible loss. I just grew them for the first time and now I'll be keeping an extra-close eye on them next year. You're so inspiring and growing something truly beautiful down there. I just pulled my dahlias today and one had crown gall and I only recognized it because you shared what happened last year. Thank you for continuing to share your journey - even, and especially, the not-so-great parts.
Gladiolus are supposed to be deer resistant. I just bought a 12 pack for $2 at family dollar! The best ones I ever grew were red and white mixed like a candy cane!
My experience with DE has been a total failure. I dusted my chicken coop and run with it, and my hens still got mites. I dusted the feed with it, to treat internal parasites and to keep the feed protected from whatever insects might eat the feed. The chickens got internal worms and the bottom of the feed bin was almost SOLID with weevils!! It also doesn't work for fire ants or argentine ants. That's it for me and DE!!!
Or you can cover the buggy areas of soil with heavy black plastic for a year and let the sun sterilize that area. I wonder if maybe as a flower grower that may be an idea to keep your beds clear in the most inexpensive way. Moving that black plastic down the garden every year to a new section. Worms will come back after you remove the plastic.
I'm really sorry for what happened... I've had some issues with a lot of plants this year, and especially bulbs (my Dahlias are just blooming!!) but it was probably due to our insanely high temperatures which lasted for weeks on end. My most trusted horticulturist had advised me to spray everything with "summer oil" (I'm guessing some type of horticultural oil) once the foliage was up in spring and another one in early summer, just before the first buds opened (I'm guessing in your climate it'd be late spring and mid summer?) and in spite of the weather, I didn't have a lot of bug issues (besides my nemesis Icerya). If you'd like I can look up the active ingredient of the oil (it's the most common oil in Greece), so you can find an equivalent one and maybe try it too with everything else next year. Best of luck!!
Thrip are the worst several years ago I had an infestation they got so bad they fell from our trees crawling on you just unnerving.i had to use malithion finally every 10days to two weeks finally after a year of faithful treatment gone.but boy they multiply fast.good luck.
Man, that sucks. Our beautiful pumpkin plant was destroyed by a bug infeststion, and it was maddening that we couldn't do anything. Fingers crossed for a bountiful, healthy Year 4 Glad crop!
I grew several gladiolus too & I had a thrips as well. This was my first time growing them, and I had bought the corms from Longfield gardens. I planted most in new pots & also a few in the ground. All of them looked like they had thrips. When I dug out the corms, I did not see any thrips, so I am confused.
I guess I am lucky, nothing bothers my Glads. I do absolutely nothing to them except water them when they are th thirsty. I don't dig them or anything, it's also one the few things the gophers don't even bother with trying for dinner! I love them!
I love your intro💞 Yes, it's an absolute beautiful flower! Them white ones are my absolute favorite!! You have a green beani you wore last winter can you share were you got that beani from please? Could they of laid eggs in them corms before you even ordered any?? They could of came from anywhere really. You will have a great 2022!!
Oh wow! I’ve never heard of this, how do we treat the soil? I have them in a cut garden and just planted them this past summer. Hugs and love from Texas!
Damn I thought mine had some sort of virus, but they looked exactly like yours. The flowers had weird white scars running through them when they finally bloomed. Damn thrips!
Question: I have some glads in a raised bed. I think drainage may be a problem. Following a heavy rain - A shoot was about 3 days from popping the buds and then went brown. Now it looks like all the blossoms are seed pods. Am I crazy???
I follow Living Traditions Homestead and they did a deer fence that was really interesting. They did two five foot fences six feet apart because deer have terrible depth perception and they won’t try to jump a shorter fence if they don’t think they have room to land. 🤷♀️ it’s a thought.
I've seen that a bunch! The small fence I use is very easy to set up and move around when needed, I'll probably just stick with that since it worked so well before.
Nicole- I lost my entire crop of Gladiolus this year to thrips! I planted about 300 corms and got 6 blooms, which didn't even look correct. I got the green leaves/shoots, but no more flowers. I decided to cut my losses and pull all of them and decided to never grow again. I just cannot stand another summer where I have to watch pests destroy a lovely crop of flowers. It is like watching them eat dollar bills, or should I say $100 bills. I'm sorry you also lost yours. I think you should see if moving them will deter the pests. I believe if you have thrips where they were planted, you have them more widely in the soil. I'm super sorry. ::raises fists to the sky!:: DANG THRIPS!!!
This is what I use. Narrow range oil and a spinosid type insecticide. Of course check for label and registration for use on gladiolus. I normally apply this just as the flower spike begins to emerge. 2nd treatment once the flower spike is half way emerged I then use Imidacolprid, I water it in. Usually see fast results. I have the Thrips issue year after year, even after soaking the corms in a bucket of water and pyganic 5.0. Nematodes take time to build and Thrips pupate in the soil crevices or in between Leaf blades. 1st to 2nd instar Thrips are the damaging stage. Must kill the young. Sticky cards can be used to monitor emergence of adults. Best of luck.
I had a virus infect about a forth of the plants I had this year. Won't grow them next year. I have 50 dwarf gladiola corms coming in spring. They have normal size glad flowers but on shorter stems so they don't fall over. Stems should still be long enough for bouquets especially if you treat them like tulips and pull the whole thing up. Will plant them in a different area of the garden too.
This is what gardening is all about. We win; we lose; we persevere. Thank you for the transparency.
As a toddler I can remember people talking about crop rotation being more omportant for flowers than veggies.
Looks like mine this year. 3rd year also. Beautiful ones the last 2 years. Im going to rotate planting places too from here on out.
Everyone who's ever been in a long-term relationship heard that tone and felt that stare when she asked if he was about done with the saw.
100% It was one of THOSE mornings.
Hahaha! Yes! My neighbors are always cutting their grass or using some sort of machinery when I go to start filming too! 😭
Can you do a video on exactly how you are going to condition/ treat the soil? That would be amazing!
Would love to hear more about your use of nematodes and predators next spring. Sending good wishes and positive vibes your way for a successful glad crop next season!
Love your humor when things so wrong. Keep the videos coming.
I love how you said “thank goodness I grew all kinds of things”. I fully agree! I also found my customers liked the diversity every week! They loved learning about the new flowers! Plus keeping it to only a few flowers is boring!! Thanks for telling your story. The good, bad and sad parts!!! You’re amazing!
You could try running chickens in the gladiolus area once they're cut down, to thin out the thrips.
They're pretty small for chickens to eat. And gladiolus are poisonous.
Oh no!! NOT the Dame Edna Challenge. That’s hysterical. I saw her live several times. Never laughed so hard in life. RIP Dame E.
I use Cinnamon sprinkled on top of my (large pots) soil, rake it in about 1" deep with my fingers to get rid of nesting bugs (usually nest in the top inch of soil). Mainly for Aphids, gnats and fleas. It works great for me. I don't know if it works on Thrips. But you can buy a large bottle of Cinnamon at Costco. Cinnamon also promotes root growth so it can also be sprinkled on your bulbs. You can test it on some Thrips and see, maybe? Just tryin' to help. I use it everywhere now. I love the stuff. Peace.
I also use cinnamon as a deterrent for any deer, squirrels or others from munching on my tulips!! It works but you have to reapply after a strong rain. To me it’s worth the few applications and then the critters get the hint
@@sharoncalatayud8658 Good to know. Making note!
Oh, I'm so sorry for your gladiolas! But don't lose hope! I had exactly the same problem with thrips last year. I grow around 150 glads and they were all destroyed by these stupid bugs! I still kept the corms and over wintered them (doing nothing special). Before planting, I threw them in a bucket filled with soapy water in which I added an insectiside against thrips and other 'sucking insects' and left them for 1 hour. I let them dry and planted them in the same spot as last year (also fearing that the trips might have laid eggs). However, this year they were splandid!! No thrips at all!! I sprayed them once with a 'bio' insecticide just to be sure but otherwise have done nothing in particular.
I was a bit puzzled by the thrips sudden disappearance so I looked up a bit more about them. Apparently, they really do not like wet soil, and will only lay eggs in dry soil. Last year was super dry and hot and this year super wet and cold. So in the end, I am not sure if everything I've done to counter the thrips mattered or not. Next year however, I will be sure to water them on most days and quickly hose down their leaves. I am sure it will keep them happy!
Thank you!
Yes castill soap works wonders too.
So sorry to hear about the glads. Your ability to roll with the punches is inspiring. What the thrip…..
I'm so sorry Nicole! 😞 crop failure stinks. Completely understand your pain.
I started over 1000 ranunculus 2 weeks ago, and my husband turned on the heater in the room they were stored. So almost every single tray molded. 😭
Thankfully that was only half of them that I had started.
You also made me order 500 or so more glads then I planned for spring 2022. 🤣
UGH yea, always expect the unexpected in farming! Mold is the worst on baby plants!
The excess rainfall early this summer was a maximal test for *everything* here this year. Every rot, mold, fungus, or insect we have was in full effect. Go with the flow, Possum.
Your hair looks very beautiful on this video! You are a beautiful fun lady. I truly enjoy your videos!
Rock on sistah Gardena. Love your Realness. and your beautiful flowers and info. Thank you.
Sorry you had all those troubles with thrips! I work with field crops and thrips are everywhere! So yes I think you are right that the infestation came from your environment rather than the corms.
sorry for your loss, but thank you for sharing the lesson. And wish you a beautiful and healthy growing season next year
My heart is sad for you . The work you put into such lovely farm . Life is hard and you see the bright side which is what it takes to garden . Forward , always forward ,everywhere forward. Thanks for sharing the downs and disappointments as well as the successes.
Would love to hear how you are planning to treat the soil. I also had no usable glads this year…thanks thrips!
We always treating gladiolus bulbs whit insecticide before putting them in ground, we loose some to trips, but luckily not much. But we grew them only for about 5 year's. My friend lost almost all gladiolus last year, but this year was successful for her.
Many grovers uses insecticide atleast 2-3 times per season we don't like to use it too much because it could affect bees.
I had a Thrip problem a few years ago on Gladiolus. With diligent application of Spinosad I completely eliminated them. They came in on some Glads I ordered as they are not a native to my area. However, once introduced they can continue to live on corms that remain in the ground overwinter, deep enough to not freeze and kill thethrips.
Girl! you almost made me cry with this video😥! There is always another chance, you will be OK - God bless you💝. Hala from Canada...
Hope you're treating the soil in the new planting spot too
Funny timing- I received my “What the thrip?!” shirt today! (Along with a FHF tee and an incredibly thoughtful bday message 😍)
I feel your pain to the core. Dealing with an insane invasion of Asian jumping worms here. I’ve gone through the five stages of grief over them.
Hang in there, and keep pushing through. You are such an inspiring, bright light Nicole! 🌈🌼
Lovely upload friend 🥰 Well done! Thank you for sharing..🙏💖
That's heart breaking. I'm happy you have such a good attitude about it and looking at solutions! 😭💔
I'm sorry you lost most. I lost over vfc 2,000 and this year. Every single one 😔 never had a problem before. I already threw half away and have the rest to dig still. Glad I saw this ❤ I'll dig these treat and store! Thank you so much for your amazing videos!!
I feel your pain. Same problems, with hungry rabbits thrown in for good measure. Years one and two absolutely beautiful blooms. The last two years the blooms would not open, turn brown and wilt. Now I know it’s the thrips!
All my Dahlias were hit hard by thrips. Because I am in California, I usually overwinter them in the ground. This year I’m digging them up and treating them with diatomaceous earth. I’m just a backyard gardener so I don’t have an alternate place to plant them. I’ll probably do them in pots for the next season and try and treat the soil with nematodes etc.
Looking forward to Dame Edna next season. Time flies!
Little buggers. I have had thrips on my gladiolus every year I have planted them. All in 3 different properties. I'm giving them a go again in my current garden. They are beautiful when they don't get thrips. 😭Sorry about your loss
So sad!!! I hope the corms are healthy and you can get beautiful blooms next year! My glads didn't do well because we had such record breaking heat, plus a terrible drought! I've saved all my corms and I'm really looking forward to trying again next year!
It was just an awful year for some crops! Fingers crossed for next season
Even in backyard gardens, too many of the same species in one location will be detrimental to any plant health. Maybe space the gladiola patches farther apart with other flower patches in between? Hopefully that could slow an infestation down to be treatable. Especially when some flowers are more disease or pest resistant than others :)
Gardening is an act of faith every year
I love your sense of humour
Oh btw you will make an awesome dame can't wait
Nicole, I am so sorry for your crop failure. That is such a disappointment and loss for you. Thank you for sharing it because it is a warning to all of us who grow gladiolas. Best wishes for another crop in another spot next year!
I had thrips on some of my dahlias this year. I hope that they don’t overwinter because I would like to grow some glads next year in the same area. The last time I tried growing glads in a different flower bed, the plants failed to thrive. My husband thinks we had cutworms in our soil. Here’s hoping next year is a better year for growing glads for both of us!
I hope so too!
My first year with thrips. It’s unbelievable how fast and sneaky those jerks are inside my dahlias. Would love updates on how you are treating your soil. 🤞🏼
I feel your pain!! 😔 first year for my cut flower garden....
Groundhogs got my sunflowers and tall marigolds. Thrips were all over my Dahlias which I've never grown before. Leaf Hoppers on all my Zinnias. But I still loved growing everything.
Wishing you more success this year. Sorry you had such a loss last year. Hope to see another video soon showing your success.
Thanks for explaining why you threw out all the gladiolus a while ago.
I had also thrips on my gladiolas ...planted them arlund trees in my street ....100 gladiolas.
Was also sad.
I will refresh soil and will choose another beauty ...love gladiolas nevertheless.
Whish you the best for next year ...2022 will be a happy gladiolas year for sure.
Omg I’d forgotten about the Dame Edna challenge!
I see thrips very early on in the season on my roses. Within a few weeks they're gone. The only thing I can think of that is taking care of the problem is, 1-Weekly bt spraying 2-Ladybugs 3-Tons of yellow jacket wasps . I don't let them nest on my property but welcome them otherwise. Just btw, anyone telling you to grow a monoculture is not understanding much about soil health and beneficial insects. The more of a variety you have, the more beneficial insects you'll bring in. Now I do have a massive problem with spider mites. Weekly spraying helps for sure, but it's so bad, that next year I'll be ordering from Arbico Organics to help take care of the problem.
Growing a variety is absolutely essential! You're doing the right thing :-) You give me hope for spring!
I was wondering what happened to that challenge. What a bummer about the glads!! What the thrip were they thinking?? lol
Anyways, hope next year's crop will be amazing and you have great success with the glads. Cheers! :)
Thank you!
I had a ton of Gladiolus planted in my front yard. I had the same issue. The flowers were wilting before even fully blooming. It was such a disappointment. Some made it and they were pretty but it seemed like even the lowest flowers wilted within a day or two. They were definitely struggling.
I had the same problem this year. They were all just destroyed. I’ll try one more time then I’m done.
I also lost all of my glds to thrips. I never had them before. I think they came in a order I got this year. I will try again next year.
Hi Nicole, some gladiolus varieties are less resistant to thrips. Robinetta, Alba, Green Star, Live Oak. I’m staying away from Charming and Charming Beauty - In a 2021 study, they came out the worst of 14 tested varieties.
Yes diversity is resilience! Sorry about the thrips, truly are the worst tiny little suckers. I know you will soldier on, and continue to inspire us all 💕
Thank you for sharing this failure! You give me inspiration and courage to share my own failures ☺️
So sorry to hear about the gladiolus. Hope the corms will make it. Pests in the garden can be so heartbreaking. May the thrips go away and never return!
Love your channel! As a vegetable farmer I recommend treating your new patch for the glads with the same corrective measures. Pests move under pressure, and you don't want them setting up shop in your new patch. Maybe plant a trap crop on the infested patch so they "stay and die". Good luck!
I'm sorry for your loss.
How disappointing! We had so much rain this year all my glads had rust. I did not even have any flowers. It was really bad. Hang in there.
None of my Glads came up. I blamed the drought and heat wave up here in Alberta, in May/June, that didn't stop through August and September. Hopefully next year will be better. Although, my lavender loved it.
So sorry about your Glads :( but I'm glad you are giving up. As one of the military mottos says, "adapt, improvise and overcome". I look forward to seeing what happens next year.
They are beautiful my problem something eating them leaves full of holes I use cinnamon no more problem it might work.
Oh man! I'm so sorry, future bestie!! I had been wondering if I missed the Dame Edna update and now I understand. I cant even fathom how hard it was losing such a massive crop that you were looking forward to so much! I only recently watched the video of you planing them and showing the bulbs you selected. You were so excited.
I feel confident that you are right in moving them away from that soil. Im sure you will have a great crop next year and your love for Gladys will continue to (dare I say) flower. :)
I feel your pain! 😩I was the one who sent u a pm about losing all of my glads 😔 I’m only a beginner so I had no idea about thrips but I do now 😒 I ripped all of mine up and threw them all away because I just couldn’t look at them anymore! They looked awful! I Felt like a complete failure 😣
I’m so terribly sorry for the loss of your glads.
I had the same problem with my gladdies this year. Total devastation of 2K corms planted. So disappointed. I also pre-treated my Fred Nagel corms with DE. I hope your crop rotation works for you! I am going to try the same thing. Xo!
Hi Nicole, just happened to watch this now.... thrips was my biggest problem with my dahlias last year, and I didn't think my glads were great either, so now I'll have to watch for thrips on them. Have you used horticultural oil or Captain Jacks? They're both organic sprays, and the HO worked really well on the dahlias. Hope you have a good year with them this year.
First off, your hair looks amazing!!!! Second, I also lost all of my glad's this year. I am in 7A, so mine over winter in the ground. The only problem with that is they all bloom at the same time. Which is nice when you have buckets full of them to give away to friends and family. But then you just have the leaves to look at for the rest of the season. All of the new bulbs I planted had issues from the suppliers, (way under sized bulbs, fingers crossed next season is better). I love the enthusiasm that you put into growing flowers! Thank you, for such great content.
So sorry about the glads! How frustrating!
ugh... what a horrible loss. I just grew them for the first time and now I'll be keeping an extra-close eye on them next year. You're so inspiring and growing something truly beautiful down there. I just pulled my dahlias today and one had crown gall and I only recognized it because you shared what happened last year. Thank you for continuing to share your journey - even, and especially, the not-so-great parts.
That's super upsetting 😡 😭 Fingers crossed next year will be better!
Wow, prayers for next year.
Gladiolus are supposed to be deer resistant. I just bought a 12 pack for $2 at family dollar! The best ones I ever grew were red and white mixed like a candy cane!
My experience with DE has been a total failure. I dusted my chicken coop and run with it, and my hens still got mites. I dusted the feed with it, to treat internal parasites and to keep the feed protected from whatever insects might eat the feed. The chickens got internal worms and the bottom of the feed bin was almost SOLID with weevils!!
It also doesn't work for fire ants or argentine ants.
That's it for me and DE!!!
Or you can cover the buggy areas of soil with heavy black plastic for a year and let the sun sterilize that area. I wonder if maybe as a flower grower that may be an idea to keep your beds clear in the most inexpensive way. Moving that black plastic down the garden every year to a new section. Worms will come back after you remove the plastic.
I'm really sorry for what happened...
I've had some issues with a lot of plants this year, and especially bulbs (my Dahlias are just blooming!!) but it was probably due to our insanely high temperatures which lasted for weeks on end.
My most trusted horticulturist had advised me to spray everything with "summer oil" (I'm guessing some type of horticultural oil) once the foliage was up in spring and another one in early summer, just before the first buds opened (I'm guessing in your climate it'd be late spring and mid summer?) and in spite of the weather, I didn't have a lot of bug issues (besides my nemesis Icerya).
If you'd like I can look up the active ingredient of the oil (it's the most common oil in Greece), so you can find an equivalent one and maybe try it too with everything else next year.
Best of luck!!
Thrip are the worst several years ago I had an infestation they got so bad they fell from our trees crawling on you just unnerving.i had to use malithion finally every 10days to two weeks finally after a year of faithful treatment gone.but boy they multiply fast.good luck.
Oh! CUTE hair tho! Sorry about the glads. 😞 you’re such a trooper though. Hang in there Nicole!
Man, that sucks. Our beautiful pumpkin plant was destroyed by a bug infeststion, and it was maddening that we couldn't do anything. Fingers crossed for a bountiful, healthy Year 4 Glad crop!
I grew several gladiolus too & I had a thrips as well. This was my first time growing them, and I had bought the corms from Longfield gardens. I planted most in new pots & also a few in the ground. All of them looked like they had thrips. When I dug out the corms, I did not see any thrips, so I am confused.
That totally sucks... when in doubt don't give up, try try again!!!! Plant the Glads in a different spot for next year.
😊😊😊✌️
I guess I am lucky, nothing bothers my Glads. I do absolutely nothing to them except water them when they are th thirsty. I don't dig them or anything, it's also one the few things the gophers don't even bother with trying for dinner! I love them!
That’s just awful what’s happened to the Glads. Really sad. I think the bulbs should be ok. Chin up🍀
Thank you
I love your personality!! 👌❤️
Thank you!
I always thought the same thing..you need to grow everything to make the best bouquets all season long..you grow girl
Great positive attitude! I wish you lots of success in the coming year!
I love your intro💞
Yes, it's an absolute beautiful flower! Them white ones are my absolute favorite!! You have a green beani you wore last winter can you share were you got that beani from please? Could they of laid eggs in them corms before you even ordered any?? They could of came from anywhere really. You will have a great 2022!!
I made the hat
I almost cried watching you walking through the graveyard...
Awe, I hope next year is better. I wonder what Fred Nagel’s would do to their glads to keep them bug free?
Thanks!
that would be my question too,what would be their solution.
I'm so sad to hear about your crop failure. Sending hugs.😞
Oh wow! I’ve never heard of this, how do we treat the soil? I have them in a cut garden and just planted them this past summer. Hugs and love from Texas!
Damn I thought mine had some sort of virus, but they looked exactly like yours. The flowers had weird white scars running through them when they finally bloomed. Damn thrips!
Well, I'm sorry about the glads! I got my Flower Hill Farm hoodie today and and am loving it 💕
I'm so glad!
Real sorry your glads got hit so bad by the thrips. Fingers crossed you can annihilate those thrips. Next year will be an even better season for you.
So sad, but a part of the growing process, you'll be fine next year:))
Poor glads. But I love your hair!!!!
Thank you!
Question: I have some glads in a raised bed. I think drainage may be a problem. Following a heavy rain - A shoot was about 3 days from popping the buds and then went brown. Now it looks like all the blossoms are seed pods. Am I crazy???
I follow Living Traditions Homestead and they did a deer fence that was really interesting. They did two five foot fences six feet apart because deer have terrible depth perception and they won’t try to jump a shorter fence if they don’t think they have room to land. 🤷♀️ it’s a thought.
I've seen that a bunch! The small fence I use is very easy to set up and move around when needed, I'll probably just stick with that since it worked so well before.
Nicole- I lost my entire crop of Gladiolus this year to thrips! I planted about 300 corms and got 6 blooms, which didn't even look correct. I got the green leaves/shoots, but no more flowers. I decided to cut my losses and pull all of them and decided to never grow again. I just cannot stand another summer where I have to watch pests destroy a lovely crop of flowers. It is like watching them eat dollar bills, or should I say $100 bills. I'm sorry you also lost yours. I think you should see if moving them will deter the pests. I believe if you have thrips where they were planted, you have them more widely in the soil. I'm super sorry. ::raises fists to the sky!:: DANG THRIPS!!!
Such a bummer!
Thank you for your honesty
Always!
This is what I use. Narrow range oil and a spinosid type insecticide. Of course check for label and registration for use on gladiolus. I normally apply this just as the flower spike begins to emerge. 2nd treatment once the flower spike is half way emerged I then use Imidacolprid, I water it in. Usually see fast results. I have the Thrips issue year after year, even after soaking the corms in a bucket of water and pyganic 5.0. Nematodes take time to build and Thrips pupate in the soil crevices or in between Leaf blades. 1st to 2nd instar Thrips are the damaging stage. Must kill the young. Sticky cards can be used to monitor emergence of adults. Best of luck.
Everything I started is stunted.
I'm so discouraged.
In zone 3b and I will plant whether they grow or not. Even my dahlias withered.
Omg girl SAAMMMEE! Complete crop failure on the glads for me too 😭
I had a virus infect about a forth of the plants I had this year. Won't grow them next year. I have 50 dwarf gladiola corms coming in spring. They have normal size glad flowers but on shorter stems so they don't fall over. Stems should still be long enough for bouquets especially if you treat them like tulips and pull the whole thing up. Will plant them in a different area of the garden too.