anyone seeing Emerald Ash Borer in Western Nova Scotia?

top gnome

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I know Bedford has seen an infestation of Emerald Ash Borer but I have not heard anything from anywhere else in the province. There is almost nothing on the internet about it. I know they are testing parasitic wasps and some pesticides that may work to slow the bugs down. We have many great ash trees and altho I much rather let them grow, if we are going to lose them I would rather harvest them and get the lumber. I would hate to wait until it is too late to at least get the lumber from them. So has anyone in the ash borer in western Nova Scotia? thank you
 

S-G-R

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Might be worth checking in with the department of forestry. They should be up to speed if the bug is in your area.
 

skeets

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I can send you a bunch if you want,, they have killed just about all around here
 

mcfarmall

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In northern Michigan the ash trees are resprouting from the stumps where the state cut them after the EAB passed through. Some are 6 inches DBH and 25+ feet tall.
 
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top gnome

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Thank you it is good to know there will be warning signs and time to deal with the trees. I have a lot of spruce to have sawed into lumber due to storms. So may see how that goes before starting on the Ash. It definitely was part of the reason I got the Tractor and grapple as well.. The Department of Forestry has not gotten back to me yet. Such a Shame we have many ash trees, one in the back yard that is maybe 3 ft across and is our primary shade tree in the back yard.
 

top gnome

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You may wish to research Arborists ? Just a thought. Back when my trees first started getting infected I had a tree company come to my place for a inspection. They did offer a tree injection service, where they drill into the tree and inject a solution. It was rather expensive, and there were no guarantees. That was about 5 yrs ago. Maybe science has improved since then and prices have come down?? We also lost a huge ash in our immediate back yard and it sucks. When we built 20 yrs ago, we did our very best to save that tree from heavy equipment as it was only about 20 ft from the house and it was beautiful.
Yes I will look into options ours is also about 20 ft from the house and is also the most beautiful tree on the property. I did read about parasitic wasps that actually lay eggs in the ash borer or the eggs of the ash borer. But it may be swallowing a spider to catch a fly as so many good ideas turn out to be. Not sure if that solution will be available in time.
 

DustyRusty

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You can blame the politicians for the problem. The US government knew about the Asian Ash borer and required all wooden products coming from China had to be fumigated before going on the ship. That was about 25 years ago. At some time in the past, China either stopped doing this, or the US dropped the regulation. The insect was first discovered in Detroit in 2002. Just one more of those things that we pay the price for having products imported from China.

Originally from Asia, the emerald ash borer (EAB) was first discovered in the Detroit area in 2002. It is believed to have entered the country on wooden packing materials from China. The bright metallic-green beetle may be smaller than a dime, but it is capable of taking down ash trees thousands of times its size.
 
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mcfarmall

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How come they can't send us some invasive species that eats every mosquito, deer fly, black fly, no-see-ums, and ticks?
 

GreensvilleJay

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If you've got ONE 'bad bug', kiss ALL your trees goodbye...ALL the ash near me(Hamlton) is felled ,ground up for mulch( city rots it....)
I never understood the guv for not demanding that ALL products imported be on PLASTIC skids, ZERO wood. Simple,cheap, effective.....everyone wins, cept the bugs.
 

top gnome

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It is a shame - thanks for the pictures. beautiful homestead. I agree it was preventable. I may start selectively harvesting and sawing into lumber and firewood sooner rather than later. Is there any areas that were spared? Is it already a done deal now that they are on the island? I know probably questions without answers. The trees right now would make good lumber if I can find someone to quarter saw. I don't have a place to put the lumber yet or a good place to put the tractor so maybe add a little area to the pole barn plan for lumber stacks. My local home hardware has 2x3 for about $5.67 each 2x3?? what the hell do you do with a 2x3? $5.67??? 2 summers ago the other lumber yard had a big sign "Home of the $2 2x4 "

Kind of got a catch 22 on my hands I need a barn to store the lumber and I need the lumber to build the barn.

I see pallet forks in my future.

The wood tick thing is crazy too. Our dog, my wife and I all got lymes the first year in Nova Scotia I bought a red dragon propane torch and burn off as much hi grass as possible and we have chickens so far fewer ticks but my neighbor from the states got vacinated some how and the dog now gets vaccinated but I guess the drug companies stopped selling it for humans because it was not profitable enough.
 
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ctfjr

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. . .
but my neighbor from the states got vacinated some how and the dog now gets vaccinated but I guess the drug companies stopped selling it for humans because it was not profitable enough.
From the CDC website:

Lyme disease vaccine
icon of a tick

A vaccine for Lyme disease is not currently available. The only vaccine previously marketed in the United States, LYMERix®, was discontinued by the manufacturer in 2002, citing insufficient consumer demand. Protection provided by this vaccine decreases over time. Therefore, if you received this vaccine before 2002, you are probably no longer protected against Lyme disease.

Whether it was profitable enough I don't know. I can tell you that our dogs get their vaccine and I don't know a single person who ever got a LYMERix shot.
You might think that users of this site would be more exposed to Lyme disease than the general population. I'd be surprised if 10% of these users got it - when it was available.
 

bucktail

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Thank you it is good to know there will be warning signs and time to deal with the trees. I have a lot of spruce to have sawed into lumber due to storms. So may see how that goes before starting on the Ash. It definitely was part of the reason I got the Tractor and grapple as well.. The Department of Forestry has not gotten back to me yet. Such a Shame we have many ash trees, one in the back yard that is maybe 3 ft across and is our primary shade tree in the back yard.
Around here a 3 ft diameter ash tree is well past its life expectancy ash borer or not.
 

skeets

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It sucks to lose those trees, but firewood wise,, yeah its ok
 

jyoutz

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You can blame the politicians for the problem. The US government knew about the Asian Ash borer and required all wooden products coming from China had to be fumigated before going on the ship. That was about 25 years ago. At some time in the past, China either stopped doing this, or the US dropped the regulation. The insect was first discovered in Detroit in 2002. Just one more of those things that we pay the price for having products imported from China.
The requirement was never dropped. Despite the requirement, the EAB was able to become established in the eastern US. Politicians had nothing to do with it. The fumigation requirement was established by professionals at the Department of Agriculture.
 

Whiskey Mike

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Hang on to your (hard) hats, next up is the Browntail Moth caterpillar. Currently munching their way through the oak trees and spreading cases of "wicked bad itchies" to humans in eastern Maine.
 

top gnome

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Hang on to your (hard) hats, next up is the Browntail Moth caterpillar. Currently munching their way through the oak trees and spreading cases of "wicked bad itchies" to humans in eastern Maine.
Good to know I was thinking of planting some oak trees. I have lost so many spruce trees and they uproot in the wind storms so I thought if I planted something with a tap root it may give the spruce a chance. Thats not good on a clear day I can see the Maine coast from my front yard .. Maybe I should go into politics. :)
 
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GreensvilleJay

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Hay ! we no longer have Gypsy moths here in Ontario !!! woohoo, damn pests !!!

oh wait... due to 'political correctness' they're now called LDD, I think....