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“Safety Makes Sense” Online Video Series
The “Safety Makes Sense” online video series makes safety education available wherever there is Internet access (www.ugaurbanag.com/safety). Business managers and owners can easily use these videos as ‘rainy day’ or ‘any day’ training.
The five videos in the series are presented in both English and Spanish and cover important topics such as
· lawnmower and equipment safety
· poisonous plants and animals
· appropriate clothing
· sun protection, heat stress and heat stroke
· repetitive motion injury
· communication with supervisors.
All videos have been approved by OSHA and were professionally produced.
“We are very pleased to present the “Safety Makes Sense” online video series,” commented Dr. Gil Landry, Director of the
In addition to the training videos the site also has links to English and Spanish versions of the manual “Safety for Hispanic Landscape Workers”. This book is an invaluable resource. Much of the material is presented in easy-to-understand picture format. This makes learning easy, regardless of the students’ language skills or literacy level.
The site also contains links to resources that will help trainers communicate with a Hispanic workforce. “This site pulls together the efforts of many people working to improve Hispanic education in the landscape industry,” according to Dr. Alfredo Martinez- Espinoza, UGA plant pathologist. “At www.ugaurbanag.com/safety you can find plant disease and horticultural resources in both Spanish and English.”
Willie Chance, Houston County ANR Agent sums it up, “Trainers, business owners and workers will all find something they can use at www.ugaurbanag.com/safety. Visit the site to see the ways these resources can help you!”

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Azalea Lace bugs Best Controlled Early in the Season
Azalea lace bug attacks azaleas and some rhododendrons. Azalea lace bugs mainly feed on the undersides of the leaves, leaving the top of the leaf with white to yellow stippling or flecking. Heavy lace bug feeding on azalea can reduce plant vigor and flowering and affects the overall look of the plant.
Adult azalea lace bugs are 1/8 inch long. The transparent wings are held flat on the back. Their wings are lacy with two grayish-brown cross-bands connected in the middle. Nymphs begin life clear but quickly turn black and spiny. The flask-shaped eggs are partially embedded in leaf tissue and often are covered with a black tar-like secretion.

Look for the first signs of damage on plants in full sun or in protected areas beginning in March and continuing throughout the summer. Lace bugs overwinter as eggs. There are four generations a year. Lace bug adults and nymphs live and feed on the underside of leaves. Look for white stippling on older leaves. Look under leaves to find lace bug life stages and black fecal spots. On azaleas with a lot of damage, the top of the leaf can become grey or silvery.
Azaleas can withstand a lot of lace bug injury without much reduction in growth or bloom. The damage however on the leaves is unsightly. Control lace bugs by treating early in the season when insects are few in numbers. Treating early also protects the new leaves from damage from these insects. Once a leaf is damaged, the injury will be visible until the leaf falls off the plant.
Time insecticide applications for the presence of the first generation nymphs, usually with the early warm weather in late February in south Georgia through March and April in central and north
Cultural controls for azalea lace bugs
· Plant azaleas only in partial shade. Too much sun stresses the plant and can make lace bug injury worse.
· Keep plants healthy with proper planting, fertilizing and watering.
· One of the best things you can do is scout azaleas early in the season to identify and control infestations while the lace bugs are young and few in number.
Chemical Controls
Contact insecticides include the pyrethroids (bifenthrin, cyfluthrin, cypermethrin, permethrin, etc.) and carbaryl (Sevin and others) as well as other insecticides.
· The biggest concern with contact insecticides is getting full coverage. The chemical must be applied to the underside of the leaves. This is difficult with larger, fuller plants.
· You may need to make more than one application for full control. Check plants three to four weeks after the first application to see if they need another treatment. Knocking the branches over a white piece of paper should dislodge the lace bugs and make them easier to see.
Systemic insecticides - Some systemic insecticides may be used as soil applications (liquid drenches and granular treatments) as well as sprays. Soil applied insecticides enter through the root system and then travel into the leaves.
- Foliar sprays tend to work more quickly than soil application but soil applications give a longer residual control – up to several months.
- Even though some soil applied systemic insecticides may take two weeks or longer to become active in the leaves of large plants, this is not a problem if plants are small or if application is made early enough in the season to provide protection for the first flush of new leaves. Read and follow all label directions since systemic insecticides differ in the way they work in the plant.
Forest & Kim Starr, U.S. Geological Survey, Bugwood.org
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