Yellow Sticky Insect Traps - Small
Park SeedPark Seed
3.0

Yellow Sticky Insect Traps - Small

USD 4.95

Description

Don't spray harmful chemicals around your garden or in your home—get rid of destructive insects the easy way with these "sticky goo" tags. Many insects that prey on plants are attracted to the color yellow, so these tags are bright yellow, with adhesive on one side. Just sink the base of the tag into the soil of your container plant (or small garden plant). These Tags are Effective Against the Following Pests:: aphids fungus gnats whiteflies leafminers carrot rust flies gypsy moths thrips. . . and many more. We use these tags in our greenhouses here, so we can personally vouch for their effectiveness. And there's no odor, no potential for noxious chemicals in the air, soil, or water, and no muss. Economical, too. These tags are easy to attach to sticks or tape, but also slide into the soil effortlessly themselves, needing no additional support. Includes: 7 x 2-inch sticky tags - 15 If you want bigger tags, take a look at the larger size. Or get a selection of both sizes with our money-saving collection. Try them for a season and see what a difference it makes to the health and good looks of your indoor or outdoor garden.

Park Seed deal

You could save on Park Seed Yellow Sticky Insect Traps - Small with a Park Seed promo code:

    Park Seed logo

    15% off

    28 uses
    high

    worked 26 days ago

    15% Off Storewide at Park Seed
View all Park Seed coupons and promo codes

More Park Seed Products

Lilium 'Apricot Fudge' Asiatic Lily Bulb

Lilium 'Apricot Fudge' Asiatic Lily Bulb

Browse Park Seed's large selection of spring, fall, outdoor and indoor flower bulbs. Grow tulips, daffodils, lilies, callas and more to add brilliant colors and fragrances to your garden.

USD 8.00

Park's Whopper Strawberry

Park's Whopper Strawberry

Park's Whopper Strawberry is a favorite across the U.S. and Canada for its superb adaptability and tough performance in the face of adversity. This June-bearer boasts unrivalled winter hardiness, thriving even in the upper limits of zone 3. And you'll just love the flavor of these plump, bright red, juicy berries. Park's Whopper is a heavy-bearing strawberry, easy to grow and very productive. It blooms in mid to late spring, with handsome ½ inch flowers, and then sets a big crop of ultra-sweet, tender fruit. Expect to harvest 1 to 3 pints from every plant. Like most strawberries, Park's Whopper spreads by runners, reaching just about 6 inches high but spreading more than a foot wide. Space plants 12 inches apart for dense coverage. This is the strawberry to grow if you have uncooperative soil or unpredictable weather. It is a classic that has been tried and found superior in garden after garden, season after season. Among the best fruit crops for the home gardener, it proudly bears the Park's Whopper name. Your order will include 20 young bare root plant starts.

USD 10.00

Black Scallop Bugleweed

Black Scallop Bugleweed

Simply the best ajuga for midnight-dark foliage, rich blue blooms, and great adaptability to varying soils and moisture levels, Black Scallop Bugleweed is a stunning groundcover for the garden floor or container. Its foliage is oversized, its habit very low and mat-forming, and its maintenance low. Black Scallop Bugleweed offers large, scallop-shaped leaves of such a deep purple that they gleam black even in the sun. They cover ground quickly, forming a weed-choking mat that replaces artificial mulches and adds dramatic color to the sunny to partly shaded garden. If planted about a foot apart, Black Scallop Bugleweed fill in in no time; however, they also spread up to about 3 feet wide, so may be spaced farther apart for more gradual coverage. The foliage—evergreen in mild and warm climates—is only one of Black Scallop's merits. From late spring into early summer, Black Scallop Bugleweed cloaks itself in rich, deep blue blooms crowded along short spikes. Very showy, the blossoms offset the dark foliage nicely. Black Scallop Bugleweed achieves its darkest leaf color in full sun, making it a superb choice for mixed container plantings, where it will trail over the sides of a planter. And unlike older varieties of ajuga, it is quite tolerant of variances in soil fertility and moisture levels. Tougher and more garden-worthy in addition to being most attractive, Black Scallop Bugleweed is the Ajuga your garden and containers deserve.

USD 8.00

Cucamelon Mexican Sour Gherkin Seeds

Cucamelon Mexican Sour Gherkin Seeds

Days to Maturity: 75 from transplant You've simply got to try this new little cucamelon in the garden, planter, or even hanging basket. Native to Mexico and Central America, it has been used for centuries by the Aztecs and other native peoples. Now, at last, it makes its way to our table, looking like a miniature watermelon and tasting like a cucumber infused with lemon. Mexican Sour Gherkin, which goes under many names, from the Spanish Sandiita ("little watermelon") to Cucamelon or Cukette, is actually not a cucumber or melon at all. The botanical name is Melothria scabra, and this native treasure is easier to grow than a cucumber and super-productive. The 1-inch-diameter fruits are simply delicious, either fresh or pickled. You can't go wrong adding this to the vegetable garden or patio. These little fruits are oval and pale green with darker green stripes. They have a thin rind and a very small seed cavity, with a few seeds that don't develop until late. Ah, the pleasure of a cucumber without the seeds. But the bite of Mexican Sour Gherkin is definitely more tart than that of a cuke. That makes it a great candidate for sour pickles, but it also can be turned into sweet gherkins. Use it as you would a cucumber, right down to salsas, sandwiches, and spreads. Prepare to be overwhelmed by the bounty of this plant. Although it reaches only about 4 feet long and scarcely 6 inches wide, it bears heavily all season, the small fruits forming among large, handsome 3-lobed leaves. Given sunshine and a good start, Mexican Sour Gherkin is prepared to take off, tolerating drought more effectively than many other vegetables, and free of pests. Grow this vining plant in a hanging basket or train it up a pea fence or small trellis. It does not like to spread along the ground; snails and slugs do too much damage. But given a vertical setting, there's no stopping it. Sow these seeds indoors about 4 to 6 weeks before the last anticipated spring frost in your area. Be patient with the germination; it can take up to a month, though one to two weeks is much more common. The secret is a bit of heat: the seeds like temperatures of 75 degrees Fahrenheit. Get out the heat mat or elevate the Bio Dome or seed tray to a high spot in a warm room to take advantage of maximum heat. Then grow the seedlings on a bit cooler (65 to 70 degrees is fine), and transplant them anytime they have 2 sets of true leaves or more. Once transplanted outdoors, Mexican Sour Gherkin really takes off. You will love the ornamental foliage, small gold blooms, and masses of charming fruit on this veggie. Have fun sharing it with friends.

USD 2.95

You May Also Like