Managing garden pests is achievable and can enhance your gardening experience! Integrated Pest Management (IPM) focuses on identifying harmful pests while protecting beneficial insects. Strategies like handpicking, using soap and water, and companion planting can effectively reduce pest problems. Read on to explore common pests in The Woodlands and how you can protect your garden!| Earthwise: Environmental Services Resources
Garden Culture Magazine| Garden Culture Magazine
EcoCare offers safe, eco-friendly pest control that protects your home, family, and environment—effective solutions without harsh chemicals or risks.| EcoCare Pest Control
When we think of lizards, images of agile, scaly creatures often come to mind, scuttling across rocks or darting through the underbrush. However, the Eastern Glass Lizard (Ophisaurus ventralis) is an enigmatic reptile that defies these expectations. Stretching from 18 to 43 inches (46 to 108 cm) in length, these legless wonders could easily be […] Read More| Coastal Georgia Botanical Gardens
By Kathy Smith, Clay County Master Gardener VolunteerBeing blessed with all this rain creates lush growth and all those critters who savor the bounty. Ive had a long career in … Continue Reading| Clay County Center News - N.C. Cooperative Extension
How do professional growers keep their rooms free of pests? Watch Professional POV with Alex Gauthier of Origine Nature, talk IPM.| Garden Culture Magazine
Cucumber beetles are among the most common pests in North America. Learn to identify, manage, and prevent them to protect your cucumbers, squash, and melons this season.| Southern Exposure Seed Exchange | Saving the Past for the Future
The UK’s National Action Plan for Pesticides guides farmers towards sustainable pest, weed and disease management through integrated pest management (IPM). By combining techniques like crop rotation, biodiversity, and selective pesticide use, IPM strengthens farm resilience, boosts food production, and helps nature thrive. In this post we share resources and case studies.| defrafarming.blog.gov.uk