Tag: Integrated Pest Management

  • Friday, December 4, 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Introduction to Integrative Pest Management, Online

    Integrative Pest Management is an objective & dynamic pest management decision-making tool involving the selection, integration, and implementation of pest control based on predicted economic, ecological, and sociological consequences. This December 4 Berkshire Botanical Garden online presentation from 5:30 – 7:30 will review the components and steps involved in implementing an IPM program. Online registration for this program is temporarily unavailable. Please call 413 354-8410 to register. 

  • Monday, March 19, 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm – Developing a Comprehensive Integrative Pest Management Plan Webinar

    An Integrated Pest Management Plan (IPM) is a tool for plant professionals to control pests in a timely, safe, and efficient manner and is a vital component in producing and maintaining healthy plants and landscapes. An IPM plan includes several aspects: sanitation and prevention, conservation, and augmentation methods using beneficial organisms. Traditionally, IPM plans also include the judicious use of chemical pesticides when all else fails. In this webinar, Alexis will discuss the negative effects of chemicals on beneficial insects and will evaluate other options such as OMRI certified and ‘safer’ products that can be incorporated as a last resort. This webinar will explore and discuss the components of an IPM plan and explain the basics of how to design an IPM plan tailored to individual needs.

    The Ecological Landscape Alliance will host a webinar on Monday, March 19 from 12:30 – 1:30 pm EST, free to ELA members, $10 for nonmembers. Register at https://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/webinar-developing-comprehensive-integrative-pest-management-ipm-plan/

    Alexis Doshas is a graduate of the Environmental Studies Department at Antioch University New England with a concentration in Conservation Biology. She ran a small organic gardening business for over a decade and worked with Safe Harbor Environmental Services as a restoration associate. She is a field researcher in a long-term NSF-funded study on the effects and mitigation of chronic atmospheric deposition of N on heathland communities of Cape Cod, MA. Currently, Alexis is the Propagator and Facilities Coordinator at New England Wild Flower Society’s Nasami Farm, where their mission is to conserve and promote the region’s native plants to ensure healthy, biologically diverse landscapes. Alexis’ interests include landscape ecology, soil ecology, nutrient processes, field research, sustainable agriculture, forest medicinal plants, and climate change. Her professional and personal goal is to serve the processes that contribute to a balanced ecosystem, both in the scientific and social disciplines.

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  • Saturday, October 21, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – Developing a Comprehensive Integrated Pest Management Plan

    An Integrated Pest Management (IPM) plan is a tool for controlling pests in a timely, safe, and efficient manner. Vital to producing and maintaining healthy plants, these plans include several components: sanitation and prevention, conservation, and augmentation methods using beneficial organisms. At the New England Wild Flower Society’s Nasami Farm Nursery in Whately, Massachusetts on Saturday, October 21 from 10 – noon, you will explore, discuss, and begin work on individual IPM plans with instructor Alexis Doshas. $26 for NEWFS members, $32 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/developing-a-comprehensive-integrated-pest-management-plan

  • Thursday, August 10, 7:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Organically Treating for Garden Pests: Integrated Pest Management

    This Massachusetts Horticultural Society August 10 outdoor workshop (from 7 – 8:30 at Elm Bank, 900 Washington Street, Wellesley) will review the common practices used for identifying insect and disease problems on common garden plants with suggested IPM and organic controls. Instructor Bruce Wenning will focus will be on insect pests. We will search for pests and pest damage in the garden.

    Bruce Wenning is the horticulturist at The Country Club, Brookline, and has been have been serving on the Board of Directors for the Ecological Landscaping Alliance since 2003. He specializes in plant pest diagnostics, insect taxonomy and iecological landscaping consultation.

    MHS Members: $12; General Admission: $20. Register at www.masshort.org.

  • Saturday, May 3, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm – Insect Pests & Diseases of Apples

    The University of Massachusetts Extension will sponsor a seminar in Insect Pests & Diseases of Apples – And How to Manage Them on Saturday, May 3, from 10 – 1 at Tangerini’s Spring Street Farm, 139 Spring Street in Millis. The class will be led by Dan Cooley and Jon Clements. One of the most challenging thing about growing your own fruit is knowing how to identify the insect pests and diseases that might afflict them. Learn the basics of pest and disease identification and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) in the home orchard. Hands-on, scouting, monitoring, placement of traps, etc. will be covered. $50 fee.  Register on line at https://classic.regonline.com/builder/site/?eventid=1460640. Image by Jon Clements.

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  • Sunday, August 9, 10 am – Organic Food Conference

    In response to a blight epidemic affecting tomato and potato growers throughout Massachusetts and all Northeast states this season, coordinators of the 2009 Northeast Organic Farming Association (NOFA) Summer Conference will hold an emergency meeting on organic methods for dealing with the disease on Sunday, August 9, at 10:00am at UMass Amherst in the Student Union Ballroom.

    Late blight is a fungal disease whose spores can spread miles from their origin through the wind. Many tomato and potato fields in Massachusetts have already been infected, destroying entire crops. The meeting is being offered free of charge to farmers and gardeners looking for short and long term solutions. There are different points of view about how to manage the disease, even within the organic farming community. The purpose of the meeting is to learn more about the disease and about the different perspectives on organic management options.

    The meeting will be moderated by NOFA/Mass board member and Hampshire College Farm Manager, Leslie Cox, and will feature diverse perspectives on late blight from both growers and extension professionals. Panelists include: UMass Extension Vegetable Specialist, Ruth Hazzard; Farmer and director of the Real Food Campaign — a project of Remineralize the Earth — Dan Kittredge; New York State Integrated Pest Management Program extension educator, Abby Seaman; and owner of Kingbird Farm and organic potato and tomato grower, Michael Glos.

    NOFA Summer Conference Coordinator, Julie Rawson said that for the organic community, dealing with the disease is an urgent priority: “The information we’ll be sharing at this meeting will help growers find means to survive severely wet growing conditions as witnessed this year, which have helped create a perfect storm for the widespread outbreak of late blight. NOFA’s contribution for addressing this problem in the long term is to find creative ways to work with nature to improve the health of our soils and our farming systems. We can’t take on the conventional approach of trying to kill the disease agents, because it won’t work– for certain in the long run, and not very effectively in the short run either.

    Hazzard who has been receiving calls from all over Massachusetts reporting cases of late blight said, “Many organic farms have lost their potato or tomato crop, while others are trying to save fields that are clean or just beginning to be infected. Many have mowed or removed the infected plants so that the fields don’t keep producing spores that travel to other farms. Now we need to look at how we can prevent late blight from occurring in future years. It will take a collective effort among farmers and gardeners to prevent late blight from surviving the winter in potato tubers and re-establishing itself from volunteers next season.”

    Kittredge directs the Real Food Campaign, which focuses its educational work on the role of minerals in the biological system of agricultural soils. He said, “Insufficient soil mineralization is at the heart of our vulnerability to plant diseases. Only through building sufficient mineralogical and biological reserves in the soil to feed the crop through extreme weather years such as this one are we capable of preventing diseases outbreaks on our farms like late blight. This is an opportunity to stand back and look at how we can address the root cause of disease through stepping up our soil management protocols. The basic tools of soil building are relatively inexpensive and not only make our crops more resistant to disease and infestation, but also increase crop quality and yield.”

    Seaman, who manages a listserv where Extension faculty and field staff share information on the outbreak of late blight in New York and surrounding states, said that “an organic farmer can do a lot to prevent the disease most years, but in years like this where there are sources of spores from outside the farm, and wet and cool weather conditions have been extremely favorable for disease development, even farmers who use the best prevention practices are vulnerable. At this point, farmers in areas where late blight is prevalent can choose to either destroy their potato and tomato crops if they get infected, or try to save them with a fungicide.” She said that the only organically approved fungicide shown to be effective against late blight is copper, a product that has been used this year on many different organic farms.

    Michael Glos runs a highly diversified certified organic herb, vegetable, and livestock farm in Richford, NY. He also trials and evaluates various potato varieties, and is looking into options for blight resistant potatoes. “Late blight is one of the most catastrophic diseases that can affect an organic farm,” he said. “We got the blight on our farm this year and we burned our potato plants to the ground. On a diversified farm, however, we can ensure that no one crop failure can bankrupt the whole farm, because other things will do well instead.”

    Even though copper sprays are approved under organic standards and many organic growers use them, Glos refuses to use them. He says they are toxic to the soil once they build up beyond a certain point, which would likely be crossed were he to have followed the recommended copper spray schedule of once per week starting in July. Glos added, “Under circumstances where our survival as a farm were at stake, we’d consider spraying copper, and I understand why many of our fellow farmers are making that choice this year.”

    The NOFA Summer Conference is now in its 35th year, and will take place starting on Friday, August 7 and ending on Sunday, August 9. Information on registering for the conference can be found at (www.nofasummerconference.org). The three day event is an educational and festival extravaganza, featuring over 200 timely workshops for growers, producers, and the general public interested in gathering practical information and finding solutions. Nationally-renowned experts and local New England practitioners will share their knowledge and provide inspiration for attendees interested in urban farming, food safety, organic land care, CSAs, animal husbandry, nutrition, homesteading, and more. A children’s program that runs throughout the weekend makes the event perfect for the whole family.

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