Reluctant Gardener – Tale of Two Species

As a gardener, even a reluctant one, there are some unwanted visitors that show up from time to time. Those are usually the species that attract the most attention from us because they seem to disrupt the equilibrium of the garden. But what if that is not the story? What if I don’t need to spend an inordinate amount of time trying to eradicate them?

Galium aparine, known around here as Sticky Willy, or the Hitchhiker plant has many names: Cleavers, Goosegrass, Catch-weed, or Velcro Plant. Leaves, stems, flower petals and seed pods are covered with tiny, hook-like hairs that cling to plants, animals, clothing, and human skin…literally everything.

A self-pollinating annual, I never look forward to early spring as its admittedly beautifully fanned leaf whorls begin to rise through the oxalis, prairie grasses, and three-cornered leeks. I can’t walk my sidewalks without this hitchhiker grabbing my pant legs. And of course when it does, it hangs on for dear life. In doing so, its stem breaks. Such a weakling. However, the roots stay embedded and the little suckers come right back up. 

Until this year, I was successful removing them in a timely manner. I never had a chance to see their display of delicate and beautiful light green and white flowers. I did not witness the seed pods, their means of propagation, so I don’t know how they proliferated throughout my property, but here they are. 

Here is the magic of this plant. It prefers to grow in shade, dappled shade or full sun…truth. It likes clay, sand, or loam. It grows in coastal areas, mountainous terrain or on the plains. It tolerates everything and grows EVERYWHERE. Though botanists think it is indigenous to North America, it is found in many other countries. It probably hitchhiked there. (Perhaps in some unwitting person’s pocket).

It’s useful. Seriously. According to my research it has a purpose. In fact it has many uses. Flowers curdle milk for cheese making. It’s used for stuffing mattresses. It’s edible.

“Wait. It is edible? What?”  

That’s right. People can eat Sticky Willy. The stems and leaves can be cooked with other greens. They are used for tea. The fruit can be dried and used as a coffee substitute. It actually has caffeine. 

(Why am I trying to get rid of this????)

It’s an herbal medicine. An infusion can help reduce swelling, treat infections, or boost energy. There are topical uses as well: ease psoriasis, eczema, and acne. It supports the immune system, and can help support the liver when detoxifying the body. It isn’t reactive with other herbal treatments nor does it affect medications. Sticky Willy is more effective used fresh and not dried, but it grows throughout the spring and summer here. 

(Note: always test a plant on your skin before you try to eat it. Then try a tiny amount, to see how your tongue reacts. Spit out if your body reacts negatively to it.) 

My body did not react negatively to this plant. I might have to create zones for this plant because I think I am going to have to learn to love this plant and look forward to its appearance every year instead of dreading it. 

This leads me to my next tale, also about Sticky Will(ie). On April 12th, 2025 family and friends gathered for my son’s birthday. It’s important to remember that my son seems to be coexisting just fine with the plant called Sticky Will(y). I sat on a bench at his party to admire a flower bed, and there it grew galium aparine, with sparkling fans shining in the string of lights lit for the party.

Go figure. 

The love of his life, his wife, invited a ‘bug lady’ to come to the party to share exotic and interesting insects. My son is a biologist with a love of all things that have multiple legs and sometimes wings. 

The first insect she shared with all the party goers was a monstrous looking thing called extatosoma tiaratum, otherwise known as Giant Prickly Stick Insect. 

I have held stick insects and at the party held another species that looked exactly how you would imagine an insect that imitates a stick should look. Extatosoma tiaratum like its name is GIANT and covered with spiky armor that reminded me of rose thorns. When alarmed, which they all were, they looked like ferocious scorpions of some kind. I did not want to hold this one and didn’t even pet it. It was interesting to “look at.” 

 I was glad when they all went back into their travel carrier.

She loved them though and told us all about it. Native to Australia, they live in trees, usually eucalyptus trees. Herbivorous, they eat the leaves. The insect isn’t harmful, but it does kick when it is angry or scared. 

Then, she gleefully showed us the poop as compared to the eggs that were dropped on the paper towel substrate she was using to transport them. The poop was long and rectangular, the eggs were round. This particular colony was parthenogenetic. 

My listening became more focused. Parthenogenesis, all female colonies – not needing males to breed: I have written about other insects that have this trait. 

She explained that the eggs are dropped to the ground, because the insects don’t come out of the trees willingly. The eggs are coated with a sugary substance that attracts ants. The ants gather them to take them home to feast upon. After eating the sugary shell, they cannot eat through the hard layer underneath so they discard them in their compost piles. (I am interested enough to do some research on ant composting practices in a later blog post.) The babies incubate in the heat of the compost, then hatch, resembling baby ants with black bodies and red heads. 

(Okay, at this point, you have to understand, I was maternally and intellectually interested. The fact that they were born as redheads intrigued me, since my own children are genetically redheads, and my daughter had vivid red hair when she was born.) 

From egg to hatchling takes nine months to 400 days. Wow. That’s a long time. By six molts they look like tiny versions of their mothers. They are quite literally clones of her, since this is a parthenogenetic colony, but there are colonies with both male and female insects. They tend to live longer, and the reproduction cycle may be faster. Each female that is born of a parthenogenetic colony is capable of producing approximately 800 eggs per year, but they only live about eighteen months.  

She continued for at least an hour and a half, perhaps two, sharing many different species with the party crowd which was as intellectually curious as I was. We held and played with many other insects, amphibians, snakes, and even an Amblypygi, the arachnid of Harry Potter fame. I spent a lot of time with a lovely creature that I fell in love with, a small Crested Gecko. 

As she packed up, all of us went to eat food, use the facilities, sit in the living room or around the outside firepit to talk. My daughter and I stayed for about another hour, later than we usually do because this was the best party ever. 

When we got into the car, we fastened our seatbelts for the thirty minute drive to her house. I planned to tank up on coffee for the next leg of my own journey, another forty minutes to my front door. I used the facilities again, made some coffee, and sat down in a chair to review the party. I got up to clean my coffee cup, and pulled a handkerchief from my pocket, which I had done repeatedly during the party to wipe my nose, because it was irritated by the fire pit smoke and my clothes reeked of it.

I felt something prickly in my pocket. Sticky Willy. I didn’t realize I had sat next to some of it, while playing with the animals. Ugh. The tiny green hitchhiker was stuck in my pocket. 

I pulled out the prickliness. It felt like velcro, just like it always did. I felt a pang of disgust because I had not yet come to terms with this plant. (This was pre-research.) 

Instead, I pulled out something brown that clung to my fingers for dear life. I held it up to my daughter. She slowly backed down the hallway away from my outstretched hand, shaking her head. I said, “This isn’t what I think it is, is it?”

She nodded her head, “Yes.” 

A Giant Prickly Stick Insect had hitch hiked home with me. What are the chances that a native tree dweller from Australia, in a yard full of people and TREES would choose my pocket to hide in? 

WHAT ARE THE CHANCES????

My daughter quickly found a jar. We called her brother, and said, “Happy Birthday. You have a new insect,” to which he replied, “No. I am leaving for Ireland tomorrow. You have a new insect.” 

My daughter shook her head, vehemently. “I don’t a don’t have a new insect,” she informed me.

I got home around midnight. I sat in my car, staring at the pint canning jar I had nestled in my cup holder. I sighed, picked it up and trudged into the house. 

My cat greeted me, and I fed her again. I stared at the pint jar on my dining table. “What am I going to do with you?” The tiaratum stayed hidden under the leaves we’d thrown at her from my daughter’s backyard. 

Finally, I threw my hands up into the air and said to the powers of the universe, “Well, I guess I am going to learn how to love an insect.”  

As I write this, she is in a two gallon canning jar, with a makeshift screen lid made for screening I’d bought to repair a door. She is happily munching on oak and rose leaves, while laying eggs. 

Oh goody for me. 

She has huge but peaceful energy, and I am starting to like her. I bought some supplies to make her a better house. I hope she lives the whole eighteen months so I can get to know her better. 

It’s amazing what one can learn and who one can find common ground with when one decides to love, whether that new love is a plant, an animal or another human. 

Works Cited

  1. https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/galium-aparine/#:~:text=Phonetic%20Spelling%20GAL%2Dee%2Dum,flowering%20and%20seed%20production%20commences
  2. https://www.verywellhealth.com/cleavers-health-benefits-5084341 
  3. https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/141860-Extatosoma-tiaratum 

The Reluctant Gardener

Armadillidiidae (photo by Lisa DeRosa)

Wee boy
Flipped a rock
Found a crawly
Picked it up
Watched it curl
Perfect ball
Rolling on his palm.
What a wonder.
Did you pop it
Into your nose
To keep it safe
To keep it close?

While I discourage this behavior, especially after a trip to the doctor to remove the little beastie, it did prove that Armadillidium vulgare, a terrestrial crustacean, can live quite happily in a dark, moist environment. (Yes, it was still alive when the doctor removed it.)

It was difficult to research A. vulgare. They are not considered agricultural pests. They are so common in our country that people take them for granted and mostly ignore them. They did not originate here though. Possibly as early as two-hundred million years ago,
sometime after the end of the Triassic period, tiny, gill-breathing crustaceans
crawled onto what would now be considered European shores and adapted to stay
land-bound. The species found in California, Armadillidium vulgare, is usually
bluish gray with plates that allow them to conglobate, or curl into a ball,
which they do for protection and water conservation. This species was
introduced to New England from mediterranean regions sometime during the
1800’s. I could not find any documentation about how they arrived in California.
Maybe they came during the Gold Rush.

Here's what we do know about them. They are nocturnal, and like dark moist places. They breathe with a gill system. Apparently, the hind-most set of their seven pairs of legs adapted to become air tubes that feed into a gill system on the underside of their body. They
roll into a ball to conserve moisture, because gills need wet surfaces to stay
healthy. One usually finds them under rocks, or leaf litter on moist ground, but
if you are a pet-keeper, it is a good idea to create some dry, warm places as
well, because they need an outside source of heat to regulate body temperature.
 

Pill bugs, or as they are commonly known in my area, roly-polies, are detritivores, consuming decomposing plants and animals. In terrarium conditions, they are helpful as they will also clean-up their own shed exoskeletons and any mold or fungus that grows in an enclosed, moist habitat.

Though not a pest, they will consume young plants. I learned the hard way that using leaf litter as a mulch only attracts them…By. The. Thousands. (Okay, maybe hundreds.) My point is nothing has a chance to grow with a large population of hungry decomposers who eat seedlings as dessert.

There have been some recent studies that claim that because they also eat fungi they help with global warming. Fungi release CO2 into the atmosphere as they perform decomposition
tasks. Armadillidiidae keep fungi populations in check, mitigating CO2 production.
Every little bit helps.

Another fun fact is that when they are cleaning up, they eat trace amounts of heavy metals, thereby preventing food plants from absorbing them. The more I learn about these little treasures, the more I am tempted to create attractions for them in my garden on purpose
instead of by accident.

Roly-polies are hatched about a week after fertilization into a brood sack on the underside of an adult female. Yes, they are marsupials. I was so thrilled to learn that. I now know that I have mammalian and crustaceous marsupials in my backyard. Yay!

The babies stay in the marsupial pouch for about two weeks. Upon exiting the pouch, these young ones molt every two weeks for about four and a half months, at which point they are considered adults. (I think. No source actually said that.) Females can store deposited sperm
for up to a year, picking the prime time for survival. This may be why some
sites claim the females can reproduce asexually. However, in my opinion, the
male courting dance seems quite elaborate: males wave their antennae at the
females to get their attention. Once they get it, they choose a mate. They then
lick and tap her to convey intention. In my mind, that refutes the notion that
females can reproduce asexually. It just seems that the male roly-poly uses a
lot of energy to get the female to like him. Why would she put up with that if she
could do it without him?

Even though I could not find much scientific research about them, because roly-polies are not agricultural pests, I had a great time researching pet sites on YouTube. Did you know they live three to five years? That’s plenty of time to form relationships with these
tiny creatures.

If you want to attract roly-polies, pile up some fallen leaves, or place a corn cob, half of a cantaloupe, or even a rotting potato outside in the shade. Leave whatever you have chosen in place for a few days, then move the waste along with scores of attracted pill bugs. I
have included links to videos that show how to set up a house for your newly
adopted pets.

Or, you can just let them mind your garden, knowing that this gift from the sea is protecting your land.

Sources Cited
https://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/MISC/Armadillidium_vulgare.htm
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/pill-bugs-emerged-sea-conquer-earth
https://www.treehugger.com/roly-poly-pill-bug-facts-important-environment-4864410
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armadillidiidae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armadillidium_vulgare

Videos
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij7VDu6iWCg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oUkDOI_QmI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-dTokDjn14   
(This is about A. vulgare in particular)

Bad Boy Bugs?

Ant Herders WIth Their Herd
Healthy Plants

I don’t believe in lawns. I don’t like wasting water. I certainly don’t like mowing a swath of grass that has no purpose except to use water to stay green. I do appreciate a plant that resembles a lawn in the springtime: three-cornered leeks (Allium triquetrum), commonly known as Snowbells.

They are not natives to California. Settlers brought these Mediterranean beauties with them when they settled here during the Gold Rush. Considered an invasive plant, and by some folks, noxious weeds, I love them. As a reluctant gardener, I am always happy when plants, especially edible plants, invite themselves into my yard. I especially love the plants that grow prolifically because they crowd out any Bermuda Grass, which I consider a noxious weed. My entire yard supports them.

I use them in place of onions and garlic. The entire plant is edible with a very mild taste. They grow in the spring and die in the summer. When they die off in the summer, they form mats on the ground, which rake up easily, but also provide a perfect mulch for holding moisture in the soil. I’ve always been impressed by how the stems and leaves line up directionally, like hair that has been combed down the sides of my yard spaces. I never questioned why.

This is my year for noticing things. It’s the first year since retirement that I have spent anytime practicing the art of Being instead constantly staying busy. There is good reason to be a reluctant gardener, to sit, observe, and learn how the environment is adapting to the changing global climate patterns. It became really clear during the quarantine that Earth recovers quickly when mankind is not out and about. It also has become clear that to continue growing as we have is not sustainable.

In my mind, I think we need to work with the change and with Earth if we want to continue to feed ourselves in agrarian societies. So, I sit and watch. My yard is not the same yard it was when I first acquired this property. The angle of the sun is different, tree cover is different, temperatures are different. Plants do not respond the way they used to. So how does it work? That’s what I hope to find out.

Along with reassurance that I still had massive amounts of three-cornered leeks, I also discovered another form of life that I had not observed before retirement. The first time I noticed it, I thought my plants were growing moldy. I wondered how to treat them for mold. Then I noticed the mold writhe across the blades and stems. OMG! I looked more closely. Black aphids. I had never heard of black aphids. (Hey! The juice from these plants is supposed to be a fabulous insecticide. Pssht. Not for these tiny creepers!)

280 million years ago aphids sucked plants dry. Since then, over 5,000 variations of this amazing insect have developed special appetites for the plants of the world, especially in temperate zones. The trouble with this appetite is that they are sipping sucrose, which they cannot digest. Why do they do it? It seems that sap is the ultimate addiction.

Their inability to process this food source makes them tasty for predators such as ladybugs, hover fly larvae, sparrows and the American goldfinch. Crab spiders are quite fond of them. Ants, acting very co-dependent to this addiction, go to great lengths to herd, protect, and propagate the little beasties because they cannot get enough of the sucrose secreted from their bodies in the form of droplets of waste, called honeydew. Ants eagerly milk this nectar from the aphids’ miniscule bodies. Even bees claim herds of aphids as their own to delight in this particular habit.

To get around this inability to digest their main food source they have developed interesting tricks and relationships. Aphids harbor bacterial endosymbionts who recycle glutamate, the metabolic waste produced while aphids try to digest plant sap. The bacterial endosymbionts turn the waste into essential amino acids. Some aphids synthesize red carotenoids using horizontal gene transfers. The way I understand this is they use the genetic material from plants, add the coding to their own, which then enables them to absorb sunlight as a food source. I guess if you have been around since the Early Permian Period, you acquire these talents.

Aphids are bad boys. Or are they?

My yard is a refuge of divine feminine it seems, for the aphid army you see on your plants is entirely female. (see: Reluctant Gardener post 2 for more information about female armies: https://avsingerauthor.com/2022/01/19/post-2-reluctant-gardener/ ) As the weather cools in autumn, males with wings and winged females mate. The males die off, their job done. Winged females lay the eggs. The eggs overwinter and hatch the first generation of a parthenogenetic army. The babies are born pregnant, and soon birth live and pregnant female offspring, who in turn birth live, pregnant offspring and so it goes. There can be as many as forty-one generations a season for each female who births another clutch of live, pregnant females every few days. These females are of course voracious in an attempt to create this army. My three-cornered leeks didn’t have a chance.

If you rid your garden of their food sources, some females grow wings and produce a generation of males in preparation to migrate. They fly as high as 600 meters to catch winds that can carry them where they need to go.

So for you, my dear friends, I have left swatches of aphids to their task. I’m not worried. My leeks appear to go through this process every year. I just haven’t been quiet or observant enough to see this before. They will be back next year for me to happily eat and share them with anyone who asks for them.

And so will the bad girls of this neighborhood.