Support |
In the "Garden Q. & A." section of The New York Times, Thursday June 13, 2002, under the heading "Cute but Hungry" a concerned reader writes: "My once-beautiful mugho pine was attacked last June by legions of loopers. . . . They clustered on the denuded branches and began rhythmically and synchronously undulating like the Wave at a ballgame. I tried hosing them off and crushing them but could not keep up. Finally, I guiltily massacred them . . . Now I'm beginning to see them again. Are there environmentally friendly remedies I can use?" The columnist replies: "The stand-up-and-sway behavior is defensive. They are extremely gregarious, always eating together, and when one member of the group raises the alarm, they all join in to scare predators away." ************************************************************ Yep . . . that sounds like us, all right . . . I'm just wondering if the author lives in Santa Cruz or San Luis Obispo . . . Short-term solution: Loop IV should keep them busy for the next few weeks! James