A Guide to Beneficial Insects for Your Gardens

Good Bugs that Destroy Bad Bugs in Your Garden
Provided By: Associated Content, Inc.

Bugs love gardens, that's a fact. Trying to fight the bugs that are destroying your garden can be difficult since the chemicals used to destroy bugs can often harm the plants as well. There are good bugs, though, that can actually be purchased and placed in your garden to keep other insects from destroying your yield.
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Not all creatures that hide in your garden are harmful. Many that may seem horrifying actually benefit your garden.

We found a one inch millipede in our newspaper curled up. I thought of how millipedes and centipedes are related and how tiny they could be. I explained to the kids that sometimes there are dangers in the garden like a centipede. They may not even realize the dangers.

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Much of the necessary task of pollinating our garden crops is actually completed by the thousands of different species of hard-working wild bees that are native to our continent.

Do you want to control the bad bugs in your garden without pesticides and chemicals? Would you like to have beautiful garden plants and luscious veggies without those nasty chemicals? The use of beneficial insects for your garden has long been a practice of gardeners for years.

Did you ever hear the reference "nightcrawlers" when talking about earthworms? Earthworms get their names because they live under the earth; they don't like the light of day. Here is an experiment that you can try at home to watch the habits of earthworms or nightcrawlers.

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