OKLAHOMA CITY — If you’ve driven around the metro lately, you’ve probably noticed big webs in many of the trees. It’s a common sight this time of year. Some are wondering if we’re seeing more of the ...
Have you ever noticed all the web worms in the trees? John Boyle with the Citizen-Times answers this question about web worms. Question: I've gotten several readers asking me about web worms, ...
Today’s batch of burning questions, my smart-aleck answers and the real deal: Question: I've gotten several readers asking me about web worms, particularly out in Haywood and Jackson counties, where ...
SANDYSTON -- Web worms are not internet tunes that get in your head. Web worms are actually the species of caterpillar which have spun hundreds of silken blobs in the trees along one of the busiest ...
Hey guys, what's up? Besides the temperatures, that is. There are a couple of problems that are popping up now. One of them is web worms. Every year they start weaving their webs in our trees and ...
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (KY3) - It will not be long before our trees are laced with web worms. “I’ve already started to see some web worms when I’m out and about, they are starting to show up in the area,” ...
White webs covering the ends of tree branches in yards and along roadsides are marring the lush green summer foliage. Fall web worms are attacking ornamental fruit trees in yards and wild cherry, ash, ...
There is nothing better than a pie made using pecans harvested from a tree in Pontotoc County. You may have visited your favorite tree recently with hopes of finding a large crop of developing pecans ...
Just in time for Halloween: Whole trees covered with spider webs. Could this be a horror flick from the 1970s? Could this be the world-wide-web that people in the 1970s never dreamed of? It's not a ...
My pecan tree had webs last year and again now. What can I do to get rid of them? — K.W., Tulsa Fall webworms have two to three generations yearly, with the largest usually appearing in late July into ...
So many bad things are happening in the environment that the sight of what looks like huge balls of cotton candy all over some trees feels like the latest new disaster. But don’t fret: They’re routine ...