Sask. sees shortage of sticky Tanglefoot that wards off cankerworms - Action News
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Saskatoon

Sask. sees shortage of sticky Tanglefoot that wards off cankerworms

A particular brand of sticky goop that helps rid trees of cankerworms will be hard to come by this year.

Maple syrup can be used as an alternative, Dutch Growers Garden Centre

Tree bands covered with a sticky substance, such as Tanglefoot or axle grease, help protect against cankerworm infestations, which can strip leaves from the trees. (Craig Saunders/CBC)

A particular brand of sticky goop that helps rid trees of cankerworms will be hard to come by this year.

Rick Vanduyvendyk, owner of Dutch Growers Garden Centre in Saskatoon, said Tanglefoot will no longer be stocked at his store a trend that is making its way across the province.

The producer of the substancewent out of business, he said.

Rick Vanduyvendyk, owner of Dutch Growers Garden Centre in Saskatoon. (Eric Anderson/CBC)

What is Tanglefoot?

The banding substance is used to stop adult female moths from climbing up trees,matingand laying eggs that turn into leaf-eatingcankerworm larvae.

"[The moth]gets caught on the sticky stuff and it can't go anywhere," he explained. "It just dies there and doesn't put all the eggs at the top of the trees where [the worms] can eat all the leaves."

Seriouscankerworm infestationsare cyclicaland happenevery seven years or so. The insectstravel up trees in the fall and then again around the end of April.

Tanglefoot alternatives

Despite the shortage of Tanglefoot,Vanduyvendyksaid there are alternatives that work just as well.

"Any kind of item that would be sticky enough that the moth will actually get stuck to it that`ll do the trick," he said.

He suggested usingmaple syrup, but advised people to stay away from axlegrease.

With files from CBC's Eric Anderson