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Allens Farm We are Organic
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A very MERRY CHRISTMAS and a PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR to all our Customers
with many thanks for your support during 2011 Jill and Peter Webb Latest News - 5th DecemberThis has been a difficult season for us. The wet spring caused a much greater proportion of nut malformation than usual. The malformed nuts were very difficult to identify from the outside and together with a bigger than average nut weevil infestation some of our customers did not get the quality they expect from Allens Farm Cobnuts. We really appreciated those who stuck with us and we did replace faulty nuts as far as we knew. We will not change our methods, or resort to spraying and we hope our customers will try again next year, and like us hope for a better season. With Very Best Wishes for Christmas and the New Year from Peter & Jill Webb (recovering steadily, thank you)
Please phone 01732 812215 9am-5pm and leave a message, or send an email to info@cobnuts.co.uk if you want to contact us. The office is not manned everyday so some delay may occur.
The Nut Weevil - Curculio nucum (Robert Burton)
The felon was the nut weevil. In past ages, when hazelnuts formed an important store of winter food rather than a Christmas extra, its presence in the ripened nut crop must have been a disaster. The nut weevil, like all weevils, is a beetle with a long snout or proboscis which has positively elephantine proportions in the female. She uses it to drill a hole into the young nut as soon as it is set and the shell is still soft. A single egg is laid in the developing kernel, and the hole heals over so there is no sign of infestation. The egg hatches into a grub which feasts on the kernel until the nut falls. My father told me how he was once sitting by a hedge when he heard a faint, crunching sound. He looked around and realised it was coming from a hazelnut on the ground. Then he saw a tiny hole open in the shell and a head emerge. The rest of the body squeezed out after it and the weevil grub crawled away under leaves. It would have buried itself and turned into a pupa.
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