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Banding Supplies

Discount supplies can be purchased at the annual
Fall Crawl Festival
which is held in Midwood Park in late October

The discounted materials are sold by the foot, while supplies last.

Tree Banding

PMNA Annual Fall Crawl

Tree Banding Update - December 1, 2009

Tell your neighbors; tell your friends; it's time to put the sticky stuff on the tree bands!  There is a sweet spot between when the leaves come off of the trees and when the first real cold snap hits, and THIS IS IT!  So please get that stuff up soon!  Through the winter, if the tanglefoot gets laden with leaves or bugs, re-apply, or pick them off to keep your band effective.  And don't forget to take them down in the spring when the weather warms up to protect your trees' bark. 

Tanglefoot too stiff to spread? 
Keep it inside in a warm room several hours before applying, then dash out in the cold to spread it.  Some even microwave it!  It should be between 1/16" and 1/8" thick on the band.

Didn't get supplies at the Fall Crawl and don't know what to do?  Three banding services have made themselves known to the neighborhood.  We don't endorse anyone in particular, but you can contact these, as well as any arborist, for quotes:

Thanks for protecting our tree canopy from the cantankerous cankerworm!

What is the Fall Cankerworm?

Fall Cankerworms are extremely destructive caterpillars that hatch from eggs in early spring, about the time tree leaves are unfolding. Cankerworms feed on leaves for three to four weeks, then either crawl or drop to the ground on silken threads and pupate in the soil. Fall Spring cankerworm larvacankerworms emerge as adult moths in late fall usually in early December after a hard freeze. The male cankerworms have wings and the females are wingless.  The females crawl up tree trunks onto branches, are mated by winged males, and then lay single-layered masses of flower-pot shaped eggs on limbs and trunks.  

Tree banding efforts try to catch the wingless females as they crawl up the trees by wrapping a tar paper band covered with a layer of sticky tanglefoot around the trunks of likely cankerworm targets.

Adult female spring cankerwormElm, apple, oak and many other fruit and shade trees are normally attacked by cankerworms, although they have been known to eat about anything with leaves during a heavy outbreak. Entire leaves are eaten, leaving only the large veins. Generally most damage occurs about the time the leaves become fully developed. Trees may be completely stripped of foliage, some never having a chance to leaf out.

How to Get Supplies

Supplies are available at your local hardware stores or at the PMNA's annual Fall Crawl Cankerworm Festival , which will be held on October 24 from 9:00 until 5:00 for $1 per foot, while supplies last.  .  Tanglefoot (the sticky stuff) for the bands will be distributed there, too.  Thanks to McNeary's Arborist and Barnhardt Manufacturing, the Plaza Midwood Neighborhood Association is able to offer these materials at a fraction of the hardware store price. If you can't make it to the Fall Crawl, you must pre-order ($1/ foot).  Contact Gretchen Carlson at gretchen_carlson@hotmail.com or 704-379-1994

Things to remember when getting supplies:

And stay at the Fall Crawl for the costume parade, great band lineup, and other fun activities!  What a great neighborhood!

Please note: PMNA makes an effort to help out our elderly and indigent neighbors who are unable to band their trees. Please contact your grid captain if you need such assistance.

Banding Timeline and Instructions

Cankerwork band with tanglefoot applied

Grid Captains / Communicators

Download Grid Map (PDF)

1 Gary Frame 1409 The Plaza gframe@rohmhaas.com (704) 375-3058
2 Volunteer Needed      
3 Patricia Connally 1809 Browning Ave. patriciaconnally@hotmail.com (704) 332-3639
4 Geoff Green 1837 Kenwood geoff.m.green@bankofamerica.com (704) 332-3649
5 Ted Hull 1712 Chatham Ave. thull@carolina.rr.com (704) 375-1545
6 Michele Hagan 2008 Truman Rd. HaganMichele@aol.com (704) 347-0403
7 Monica Hancock 1808 Logie moonsuan@hotmail.com (704) 375-3100
8 Karen Geiger 1801 The Plaza kag@mindspring.com (704) 372-9842
9 Myrna and Marilyn Hodges/ Morenz 1925 Tippah mandm1925@carolina.rr.com  
10 Cheryl Mittman 2249 Chambwood cheryl_mittman@yahoo.com (704) 780-1344
11 Londa Strong and Lesa Dillard 2241 Chambwood londastrong@yahoo.com (704) 791-7816
12 Helen Lipman 2229 Chatham Ave. hlipman@carolina.rr.com (704) 334-4182
13 Cecilia Brien 2115 The Plaza LGTAT15@yahoo.com (704) 338-9591
14 Volunteer Needed      
15 Scott Vanhatten 2124 Matheson Ave. scott.vanhatten1@wachovia.com (646) 326-7753
16 Volunteer Needed      

 

About PMNA Tree Banding

Fall is time to get ready for the annual cycle of the cankerworm defense in Plaza Midwood by banding our trees! The goal of tree banding is to help protect our wonderful old oaks from the onslaught of the destructive cankerworm.   Thanks to our hard work over the past several years, we have seen significant improvement in our crusade against the cankerworms. In fact, our overall neighborhood education about tree banding has improved to the point where neighbors are banding their own trees with their own supplies. This was one of our original goals for the project.

The PMNA created the annual Fall Crawl Cankerworm Festival in the summer of 2006. Scheduled for the last Saturday in October, the festival is intended to help bring attention to our efforts to stop these pests. Together with the tree banding strategies that have been successful in past years, the neighorhood association is hopeful that we can make even greater strides to protect one of our neighborhood’s most valuable assets.  Thanks for your support!

 

Copyright © Plaza Midwood Neighborhood Association

Copyright © Plaza Midwood Neighborhood Association

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