Eggplant strawberry disaster

For photos of the problem please refer to Alt.binaries.pictures.gardens
under the same subject line.

As you'll note in the photos, the plant was chopped in half on one plant.
And the other plant the leaves were pulled off and left on the ground. There
were 5 more eggplant plants but nothing remained of them. The plants were
about a foot and a half in size with fairly large leaves so it couldn't be a
cutworm. I'm also attaching a photo of a strawberry that was eaten through.
My garden is behind a five foot fence with chicken wire that is running
along the bottom (2 feet height) so that smaller critters can not get in.

I know that deer can easily jump over, but they would leave foot marks, and
there are none. I've inspected the ground around, and don't see any holes,
nor do I see any prying in the fence anywhere.
I was wondering what it might be. We do have a lot of groundhogs, deer,
beavers, cottontail rabbits, moles, and lots and lots of birds, Central New
Jersey.
I grow lettuce less than 20 feet away, tomatoes, potatoes, and peppers and
nothing was touched. Any clue?

-M
GrlIntrpted [ Fr, 19 Mai 2006 20:17 ] [ ID #123211 ]

Re: Eggplant strawberry disaster

GrlIntrpted wrote:
> For photos of the problem please refer to Alt.binaries.pictures.gardens
> under the same subject line.
>
> As you'll note in the photos, the plant was chopped in half on one plant.
> And the other plant the leaves were pulled off and left on the ground. There
> were 5 more eggplant plants but nothing remained of them. The plants were
> about a foot and a half in size with fairly large leaves so it couldn't be a
> cutworm. I'm also attaching a photo of a strawberry that was eaten through.
> My garden is behind a five foot fence with chicken wire that is running
> along the bottom (2 feet height) so that smaller critters can not get in.
>
> I know that deer can easily jump over, but they would leave foot marks, and
> there are none. I've inspected the ground around, and don't see any holes,
> nor do I see any prying in the fence anywhere.
> I was wondering what it might be. We do have a lot of groundhogs, deer,
> beavers, cottontail rabbits, moles, and lots and lots of birds, Central New
> Jersey.
> I grow lettuce less than 20 feet away, tomatoes, potatoes, and peppers and
> nothing was touched. Any clue?
>
> -M
Boids, dirty, rotten, stinkin boids! ("The Producers")
Seamus [ Fr, 19 Mai 2006 20:37 ] [ ID #123214 ]

Re: Eggplant strawberry disaster

"Seamus" <zawadzki [at] yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1148063832.196414.324020 [at] j55g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

> Boids, dirty, rotten, stinkin boids! ("The Producers")

You mean birds? What kind of birds would do that?
GrlIntrpted [ Fr, 19 Mai 2006 21:21 ] [ ID #123215 ]

Re: Eggplant strawberry disaster

Squirrels on hanggliders? Definitely a case for Jonathan Creek. Sorry, don't
have
a clue. You could try setting up some traps and/or Have-A-Hearts.

Sherwin D.

GrlIntrpted wrote:

> For photos of the problem please refer to Alt.binaries.pictures.gardens
> under the same subject line.
>
> As you'll note in the photos, the plant was chopped in half on one plant.
> And the other plant the leaves were pulled off and left on the ground. There
> were 5 more eggplant plants but nothing remained of them. The plants were
> about a foot and a half in size with fairly large leaves so it couldn't be a
> cutworm. I'm also attaching a photo of a strawberry that was eaten through.
> My garden is behind a five foot fence with chicken wire that is running
> along the bottom (2 feet height) so that smaller critters can not get in.
>
> I know that deer can easily jump over, but they would leave foot marks, and
> there are none. I've inspected the ground around, and don't see any holes,
> nor do I see any prying in the fence anywhere.
> I was wondering what it might be. We do have a lot of groundhogs, deer,
> beavers, cottontail rabbits, moles, and lots and lots of birds, Central New
> Jersey.
> I grow lettuce less than 20 feet away, tomatoes, potatoes, and peppers and
> nothing was touched. Any clue?
>
> -M
sherwindu [ Sa, 20 Mai 2006 07:07 ] [ ID #123242 ]

Re: Eggplant strawberry disaster

Birds, yes - crows and jays, mostly. Orioles and others will often
damage fruit.
Seamus [ Mo, 22 Mai 2006 13:28 ] [ ID #123368 ]

Re: Eggplant strawberry disaster

Birds, yes - crows and jays, mostly. Orioles and others will often
damage fruit.
Seamus [ Mo, 22 Mai 2006 13:28 ] [ ID #123369 ]
Garden / Garten » rec.gardens » Eggplant strawberry disaster

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