cityworker415
Well-Known Member
Just a few more days man! Looks rad in a cup
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Thanks man! Yeah, she's starting to foxtail, and it looks like the majority of her bulking up is done.Just a few more days man! Looks rad in a cup
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Well, it took a few years to happen, but I've got big problems: spider mites. No webs yet, but I see the little assholes. Working the issue; will report back when it's resolved. Going to try adding some predatory bugs to the tents first, then will upgrade natural, then non-natural miticides. O_O
care to elaborate any on the aloe/silica? I'm not too keen on putting them in the shower.... two are in heavy flower(actually very little infestation on these), and one is just starting to show pistils(heaviest infestation). I did take everything from the veg tent and tried to rinse them in the shower.aloe / silica ( pro tekt) will get rid of them in 1-2 applications. or go rinse off each leaf in the sink or shower or with a pump sprayer with enough pressure. the gallon size ones are good..
Is it safe to spray the buds? Do you really soak em down good, or use a light mist? Thanks man, I will try this tomorrow, then hit them with the predatory mites.5 mils of pro tekt and squeeze our a leaf or 2 into a spray bottle. Quart.
silica slices and dices pests. And aloe enzymes are inhibitors to pests and kill off harmful pathogens.
I was looking at that kind and went with the Amblyseius fallacis. Think they will work?You can try what hydroot said to slow them down, then unleash this on them:
https://hydro-gardens.com/product/neososeiulus-californicus-500-5p369b/
I have used them from that source and have had no mite issues since. It is important that they come fresh (those are drop-shipped straight from the grower of them in oregon)
Once they run out of mites to eat in your tent they will just continue on eating them all up around your house and property. Plus it is very cool biowarfare kind of shit to get out your scope and watch them in action!
I am not familiar enough with mites and all the species to say on those but if that is the description and they arrive in good health you should be in business.Is it safe to spray the buds? Do you really soak em down good, or use a light mist? Thanks man, I will try this tomorrow, then hit them with the predatory mites.
I was looking at that kind and went with the Amblyseius fallacis. Think they will work?
Here's a copypasta from the website:
Target Pests: Two-spotted spider mite (Tetranychus urticae), European red mite (Panonychus ulmi), Spruce spider mite
(Oligonychus ununguis), Southern red mite (Oligonychus ilicis), Bamboo mite (Schizotetranychus celarius)
I was hoping this would be the best option...fighting mites with mites. I don't really want to use anything that's very toxic. I'd rather throw the plants out, tbh.
I bought them from evergreengrowers.com. They sound pretty hardy and bad-ass as far as predatory mites are concerned.
I read that too. Since it's summer, it doesn't ever get even close to 64F in the tent, so I was hoping that they'd be okay. They will definitely be okay in the veg tent.I am not familiar enough with mites and all the species to say on those but if that is the description and they arrive in good health you should be in business.
Only issue I could possible see with that species is this:
"Adult females enter diapause in response to the short days in the fall (less than 14 hours of daylight). They stop reproducing and move into sheltered areas, such as under bark or ground cover. They do not enter diapause in greenhouses or interior plantscapes if the temperature is 64°F (18°C) or above."
Not sure what to make of that, you have short days but also warm temps inside
Will do... also, I'm running 13/11 in the flower tent, so hopefully that will help them be okay if the temps do get that low for some reason.Ya, keep us posted how that species does for you. This kind of info is golden IMHO
So, they've been keeping to the tree of life, I can't find any on the other two plants even though they're touching. I have to believe that they're everywhere though......My predator mites will be here today, so it's game-on in the tents. You're right about the chems....I think I'd rather throw everything away and start over...I've got no problem with "chem" nutrients, but pesticides are a different story.How far are you into flower? spider mites are a bitch too eradicate..............Hyroot's advice is solid, your last organic option would be sulfur sprayed or burned, kills everything and is an irritant obviously. Local organic farms use it successfully , but not on cannabis. tough call going chem, even food crop approved with a product we inhale......wish you luck friend.
http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7405.html
Any word on the Grasshopper???????