Now this is a borer!
- hard1all
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Now this is a borer!
Have had a large willow gradually eaten away over the past several years.
This week's winds finally brought down the last of it and it is now just a stump.
These fellows are the culprits.
Does anyone know what they are?
This week's winds finally brought down the last of it and it is now just a stump.
These fellows are the culprits.
Does anyone know what they are?
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Re: Now this is a borer!
Well fed.
So the Redwood turns to the Bonsai and says "Lend me a Tenner"......
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Re: Now this is a borer!
Looks like a witchetty grub, but I don't think they are found in Sydney.
Only one I have seen around here come in lolly packets.
Fiona
Only one I have seen around here come in lolly packets.
Fiona
- bodhidharma
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Re: Now this is a borer!
Pretty sure it is curl grub. The just took out my front entrance. They are prolific at the moment.
"Advice is rarely welcome, and the one's who need it the most welcome it the least"
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Re: Now this is a borer!
looks like either a witchetty or bardi grub to me-----good fish (murray cod)bait
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Re: Now this is a borer!
Yep looks like a bardi grub to me also. That's about a buck sixties worth! He's a fine specimen. Old man Murray would love to get his lips around him 

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Re: Now this is a borer!
G'day.
It's a wood grub, found in willow trees, very good bait for native fish. I have about 300 of them brined in the freezer.
Bardi grubs are not found in trees, but under the ground eating the roots of native gum trees. Eg: Gray,box,yellow gum red gum.
Thay do not eat willow, wattle, mel's
Find a fisherman and sell them to him for $1 each
Regards.
Irish
It's a wood grub, found in willow trees, very good bait for native fish. I have about 300 of them brined in the freezer.
Bardi grubs are not found in trees, but under the ground eating the roots of native gum trees. Eg: Gray,box,yellow gum red gum.
Thay do not eat willow, wattle, mel's
Find a fisherman and sell them to him for $1 each

Regards.
Irish

One Day i will know something, but most likely it will be to do with nothing.
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Re: Now this is a borer!
I think these are probably the larvae of one of the longicorn beetles. They are sort of square in cross section and bore through wood for several years before hatching into the adult beetle. I often find them while splitting firewood - the chooks love them)
Witchetty grubs also bore into wood but are more rounded. They are the larvae of large moths.
The bardi grubs I know are even bigger than this one but live underground as Irish has said. They are the larvae of the Wattle Goat Moth - a big grey moth that bangs on the windows in our are during Autumn. (some people call these Bogong moths but real Bogongs are much smaller)
Witchetty grubs also bore into wood but are more rounded. They are the larvae of large moths.
The bardi grubs I know are even bigger than this one but live underground as Irish has said. They are the larvae of the Wattle Goat Moth - a big grey moth that bangs on the windows in our are during Autumn. (some people call these Bogong moths but real Bogongs are much smaller)
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