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Simple strategies to fight garden pests the organic way!
(Nutritional Anarchy.com)
The bane of every garden is its pests – unwanted insects ravaging your growing crops, as well as four-legged creatures ready to treat your hard work as a free meal.
But for those raising an organic garden – without potentially harmful chemicals and pesticides – it can be an even greater challenge to keep out invasive and nosy creatures without killing the life around you and introducing detrimental compounds into your body and the surrounding ecosystem. But some of the strategies are often simpler than you expect.
(Nutritional Anarchy.com)
The bane of every garden is its pests – unwanted insects ravaging your growing crops, as well as four-legged creatures ready to treat your hard work as a free meal.
But for those raising an organic garden – without potentially harmful chemicals and pesticides – it can be an even greater challenge to keep out invasive and nosy creatures without killing the life around you and introducing detrimental compounds into your body and the surrounding ecosystem. But some of the strategies are often simpler than you expect.
Organic pest control – Natural bug and insect repellents
This video from Howdini.com covers some basic approaches to control pests in an organic garden – where avoiding the use of any synthetic pesticides and chemicals is one of the first priorities.
Some of these relatively simple tips include:
– Observe your garden: According to Scott Meyer [Author, The City Homesteader & former editor of Organic Gardening], about 80% of insects commonly found near gardens are actually beneficial. The most well known and celebrated of these beneficial insects is the Ladybug, but others include the Preying Mantis (which prey upon other insects, not you or your garden, despite its menacing appearance).
This chewed up broccoli leaf gives testament to the fact that not all pest activity is harmful to your crop – which in the case of broccoli is not the leaf, but the head. Screengrab from Howdini video (2009)
– Not all pest activity harms your garden: Using a well-chewed broccoli leaf, Meyer also explains how not all invasive foraging interferes with your production. While this broccoli leaf has been nearly destroyed, it in no way compromises the healthy head of broccoli (which is the coveted vegetable treat most intended to grow).
Thus, if insects are only munching on parts of plant that are not critical to your harvest, it may not be harmful and could even have a side benefit of drawing pests away from other leaves that are edible crops (such as Kale leaves, etc.). This is sometimes done intentionally with radishes, which are quick growing, less valuable and can be planted between other more desirable crops.
For the insects and other pests you do want to target, there are several worthwhile alternatives to using chemicals that could harm you, your crops and the surrounding environment:
Repel Unwanted Pests With Harmless, Safe and Cheaply Homemade Soaps & Oils
– Peppermint Oil & Soap: One of several insecticidal soaps that works as an organic pesticide is a peppermint oil-based soap. Recipes vary, but basically these ingredients are mixed in a gallon of water and sprayed directly on plant leaves weekly for pest control.
Scott Meyer discusses a product called “Rose Pharm,” a certified Organic brand of peppermint oil insect soap used to keep bugs off leaves and disable them without causing harm to anything else in or near your garden and home. The product description reads in part:
100% PURE Amazingly, pure peppermint oil scrambles the senses of insects, leaving them disoriented, unable to breed, feed or breathe. We have actually seen aphids land on treated rose buds, scramble around for 15 minutes and fly away!
According to the product’s website, it can deal with “Mealybugs, Ants, Thrips, Aphids, Spider Mites, Whiteflies, Scales, Leafhoppers, Earwigs and more.”
– Garlic Oil: Another recommendation is for the same purpose is garlic oil, which is also commercially available, but can be cheaply made at home by stewing a minced clove of garlic in a cup of vegetable oil (refrigerated) for a couple of days (the oil extracts the natural oil from the garlic, as well as other materials). Afterwards, strain out the garlic and use 2 tbsp. of the garlic oil with a quart of water and a few drops of soap (real soap is most recommended, but responsible dish soap can work in a pinch).
The resulting mixture is sprayed on plants and many types of bugs are repelled. Apply weekly or as needed.
The Sierra Club (Canada) provides the following recipe:
Garlic Oil Spray:
Step 1
• 3 Ounces of minced garlic; 2 teaspoons of mineral oil
• Soak the garlic in the mineral oil for a least 24 hours…
• Mix in a glass jar
• 1 Ounce of dishwashing liquid
• 1 Pint of water garlic and mineral oil mix
Step 2: You can use the glass jar to store the excess solution.
Plant Application Use Only:
• 1-2 Tablespoons of concentrated garlic mix
• 1 Pint of water
• 1 Spray bottle
– Insect Killing Soap: A variant of the other organic pest control measures is insect soap, which ‘washes away’ the protection provided by the exoskeleton when sprayed directly on many insects.
This, too, is commercially available but can be cheaply made at home with existing ingredients.
Here is the Sierra Club (Canada) recipe:
Basic Soap Spray
• 2 Tablespoons biodegradable dishwashing liquid
• 1 Gallon of warm water
• Mix and use as a spray.
• Repeat as necessary
– Cayenne Pepper / Hot Pepper Spray: It isn’t discussed in the above video, but many gardening aficionados also recommend using cayenne pepper to repel not just insect pests, but other neighborhood pests (such as cats, raccoons, etc.) as well....
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