Learn How to Identify and Prevent Leaf Miners
The Almanac Garden Planner - Use It Free for 7 Days!
Plan your 2025 garden with our award-winning Garden Planner.
ADVERTISEMENT
I have a question if someone could e-mail me the answer. My sister had leaf miners on her beets last year. She won't plant anymore because of that. My question is does she need to treat the soil the beets were planted in before planting anything else? We live in Calgary, Alberta, Canada so have very cold winters. Would that cold have killed the leaf miners in the soil? Thank you.
Leaf miners totally destroyed my beet crop last year as well. Grrrr. The biggest beet was the size of a golf ball, but most stayed the size of marbles and the tops were almost non existent. I live in Newport, Oregon and we have generally mild winters. I wholeheartedly understand your sister's frustration. I did not plant any beets this year either. I have some columbines that came up in the same place last year that had leaf miners as well (they didn't keep them off the beets as I read they were helpful for deterring leaf miners). This year I have been surveiling the columbines in and near my garden every few days and picking off the leaf miner infected leaves and baking them in the oven or boiling them in water in the microwave. "Luckily" I don't have a huge garden. There have been fewer and fewer infected leaves, and hopefully I will remember to come back to this blog next year to give an update as to how the beet crop is doing. But that has been my approach so far this year.
Hi Jill,
Sorry to hear about your sister’s issues with leaf miners last year. When leaf miners are present in a growing season, after harvest it is a good idea to till the soil in an attempt to destroy pupae and reduce the chances of adult flies emerging the next year and infesting other plants. Since leaf miners were an issue last year, it is best to rotate crops away from plants that produce leafy greens thus creating more of a challenge for emerging leaf miners to find greens.
Unfortunately, leaf miner pupae will survive in the soil throughout the winter, so they will likely be present again this year. It will be important to regularly check young plants this spring for leaf damage. If you notice leaf damage, it is best to remove the leaves to help disrupt the leaf miner life cycle.
Hope this helps!