U of A University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture

Pictures of chickens, flowers, wheat, a boy looking through a magnifying glass, irrigation pipe, soybean pods, and fruits and vegetables.

Cooperative Extension Service

Cooperative Extension Service

Agricultural Experiment Station


Search | Publications | Jobs | Personnel Directory | Links
County Offices | Departments

About Us

Find Us

For the Media

Agriculture

Business & Communities

Families & Consumers

Health & Nutrition

Home & Garden

Natural Resources

4-H Youth Development

Public Policy Center

For Faculty & Staff

Giving

Dale Bumpers College
of Agricultural, Food &
Life Sciences


Division Home

Agricultural Experiment
      Station Home


Cooperative Extension
      Service Home


Polk County Home

 

 

Polk County Master Gardeners
News Articles
Cutworms

I like to tell myself that I believe all God’s creatures have a right to live and to have space to do it in. Snakes, spiders, even skunks don’t dissuade me. But I will have to admit that tomato cutworms undermine my confidence more than a little.

The first inkling I usually have is when I find my garden littered with stubs of plants where yesterday there were flourishing peas, peppers, and tomatoes. They don’t even seem to eat much of the plant - just nip it off and scatter leaves and stems about.

There are chemicals you can use to combat them, but I find that I can usually keep the damage within reasonable bounds with collars. After I realize the worms are there, of course.

Almost any stiff material will work, but some are better than others. The main thing is to surround each stem with some protection. Your collar should sink into the ground about an inch and extend above it for about two inches. Be sure to leave at least half an inch between stem and collar for the plant to grow.

The easiest way I have found is to use the little half-pound tubs that soft margarine comes in. It is surprising how many of those you can accumulate between one spring and the next! Cut the bottom off each tub and you have a neat, ready-made collar.

Take your supply of collars out to the garden and slip each one over a plant and sink it into the ground firmly. Try not to disturb the soil around the roots any more than you have to. When the plant is 8 or 10 inches high, it is strong enough to resist the worms on its own, and you can remove the collar. You will probably have to cut it because the plant will be too large to pull the collar off. You can just leave it in place if you check now and then to be sure the collar is not constricting plant growth.

If you don’t have margarine containers, you can buy inexpensive plastic glasses, cut the bottoms out, and use them the same way. Or you can make collars from aluminum foil. Be sure to use a “drug-store fold” (bring the ends together, fold over twice, crease firmly, and then open to form a ring) to fasten the ends together securely. I’ve heard that you can use cardboard, but I’ve not tried that as I think it would probably fall apart in the rain.

But the most important thing is to inspect your baby plants daily so that you catch the villains before they wipe everything out.


By Barbara M. Tobias

Back to News Articles
Back to Polk County Master Gardeners

© 2006
University of Arkansas
Division of Agriculture
All rights reserved.
Last Date Modified 05/15/2006
Webmaster

Polk County
Cooperative Extension Service
211 DeQueen Street
Mena, AR  71953
Phone (479) 394-6018 • Fax (479) 394-8137

MissionDisclaimerEEO
PrivacyFOI