We are Moving, Building a New Website and Name Change.

Our new web site is on the way while we are trying to set up our new store location. I thank all of our friends, clients and vendors for their patience while we move forward.

Neighborhood Nursery is undergoing a name change from it previously being Las Tunas Nursery. We decided on an easier name for newcomers to remember us since we are no longer on Las Tunas Dr. Our number has also changed. Our new, temporary, number is 626-872-4537 and ask for the nursery or the landscaping division.

Suddenly losing our lease for the nursery at 1155 E Las Tunas after 15 years in business was a shock to us. We want to stay in the San Gabriel Valley to support all those who helped us grow from an undeveloped piece of land under the Edison Right of Way, to the thriving business we built.

We are searching out properties in Pasadena at this time.

Thank you for your continued support.
Frank

Chemical Application Guidelines

Our preference is not to use chemicals around our homes, parks, schools or farms. But in some instances there are people that feel the use of pesticides is warranted. Be if for fleas that come into the home, rodents that can spread disease invading a food warehouse or insects that devastate entire crops, a “natural” remedy can not be found, so a man made pesticide is used. Note that the word “natural” has to be used carefully. Many man made products, such as pyrethrins, are naturally occurring and are derived from plants, in this case chrysanthemums.

So if you are an organic grower or an conventional farmer, the reality is that pesticides are used around us. Therefore, all of us should understand how to safely use any product. The following guidelines are just the minimum safety rules to follow.

Many pest control products on the market today have been tested and are found to be safe to use. Many have a label that show the product is no more dangerous than aspirin. Of course, aspirin can be abused and for some people it can be very dangerous. So be very careful when handling any pesticide, no matter how safe the label says it is. Certain pesticides, including insecticides, herbicides and fungicides can be very toxic. Again, read all product labels very carefully and use these products only as directed.

The primary rule in selecting what control to use is to first determine if one is actually necessary.

Use an IPM approach. Integrated Pest Management inspections will show what pests are present and when their populations increase to economic loss levels.
Use a natural compound if available.
Spray only when pest pressures show a loss to your plant material or crop will occur.
Use the least toxic products available that can do the specific job.

It is important to note that there are also some very dangerous products being used today. If used correctly and by following label directions carefully, these products will not cause any environmental harm. However, if used inappropriately, restricted-use pesticides are often very toxic to fish, mammals, and aquatic organisms. Extra precautions are to be observed when spraying in the vicinity of aquatic areas such as lakes, reservoirs, permanent streams, marshes or natural ponds, estuaries, and commercial fish farm ponds.

Some extra care should be taken during application of these products-
Spray the last three rows windward of aquatic areas using nozzles on one side of the sprayer only, with the spray directed away from aquatic areas.
Avoid sprays going over tops of trees by adjusting or turning off top nozzles.
Shut off nozzles when turning at ends of row.
Shut off nozzles when passing gaps in tree rows.
Do not apply when weather conditions favor drift to aquatic areas.
Do not apply within 110 feet upwind of aquatic areas or when wind speed is above 8 mph.
Do not apply during a temperature inversion.

If a problem should occur, notify the proper authorities immediately.

Pond Bacteria

Pond Bacteria can be very helpful when used appropriately in fish ponds. But no additives or UV lighting is a substitution for proper pond filtration.

Using chemicals, UV lights or bacterial additives to control algae, is like using bandages, covering up a much more dangerous, underlying cause of the green water.

The usual cause of green water, other than environmental changes that throw bacteria colonies out of sync, are undersized biological filters and/ or the pumps that run them. The bacterial colonies are not large enough to handle the breakdown of nutrients that algae feed on. So the algae flourish, while you don’t get to see your fish.

I will explain the reasoning behind this at a later time but the basic principles behind the issue are-

Overfeeding- adding excess nutrients to the pond.
Undersized filters- the filters are too small even if the fish are never fed.
Poor Maintenance- skimmer pads must be cleaned and excess organic matter removed from the pond.
Under sized filter pumps- If the pond has inadequate circulation, even the largest filters you could possibly install with not be able to do their jobs.

Pond Turnover

Each year, especially those with extreme temperature changes, I get a number of pond owners call who have had a pond “turn-over”, with dead fish the end result. The weather we have been experiencing over the past few weeks, cool then hot, then cool again, have had some pond owners experience foul odors, murky water and dead fish.

It is oxygen depletion that is the cause of the most serious problems, especially the dead fish. Here’s how these turn-overs happen.

During hot summer weather, surface water becomes less dense as it absorbs heat and floats over a cooler, more dense layer of water. This layer prevents the oxygen produced in the warmer layer from mixing with the lower cooler layer.  Since these two layers may not mix for weeks at a time, especially in deeper ponds, oxygen is eliminated near the bottom of these ponds.

Biological and chemical activities that take place in the lower, cooler layer is what uses and depletes the available oxygen. Next, a cool snap or a thunderstorm with wind and hard rain can cool the warm surface water making it heavy enough to sink and mix with the oxygen deficient bottom layer. The net result is a dilution of the oxygen and an increase in the demand for oxygen from dissolved minerals and decaying organic matter.

To complicate these problems –the algae usually die at the same time. When a die-off occurs, the green water often becomes streaked with gray, black or brown. The color of the water may eventually become totally brown, gray, black or even milky. A distinct foul smell may also be noticeable, often like rotten eggs. “Turn-overs” cause the most catastrophic fish kills in ponds, with 100% losses.

Some ways to help avoid this problem.

First,  keep the nutrient level down so that plankton blooms don’t become excessive. Risk of turn-over is considerably less when visibility of a white object (disc) in the pond is 16-18 inches. You can hook a white object like a large pickle jar lid to a stick and mark the stick off in inches. This can be used to check the water.

Secondly and very helpful is the installation of an aerator that can be run at night and during extended periods of cloudy days. An aerator is good insurance against fish kills. An area of oxygenated water near the aerator will help the fish survive until the pond recovers from a low oxygen period.