Sir Napsalot
Well-Known Member
I spray BT early in the morning before the sun hits
This is my first outdoor grow and I was wondering about doing a fungicide or not since I have fans running on them all the time it's not raining on them and they aren't real dense. I don't get a lot of direct sunlight though, especially in the morning and we have really cool damp mornings in the mountains. Is the Cease you're talking about able to be used into late flower, and will it affect taste profile at all do you know? I am growing two plants with really strong orange terps in smell and taste and just don't want to risk losing or changing the flavor. I'd rather risk a small loss to bud rot if that might happen. Thanks for any advice you can give.Yes I agree spraying right after the sun is off them is the best time I have found. I have been using the cease biofungicide for botrytis and pm prevention. along with the bt.
The fans are a really good idea. I've been using them for a few years they really help alot. September and October are when the buds will get very dense and problems can happen. I honestly don't spray anything on them late in flower. In about 2 or 3 more weeks I will stop. harvest around 3rd week of October. Hopefully! if all goes well . I was using serenade fungicide for the last few years it was basically the same as cease. I have never even thought about it after harvest all the bud is great. If you were even worried about it you could wash your buds after harvest. Do a search there's alot of info on it. Anyway botrytis is not always losing a few buds. before using the serenade/cease I have lost whole plants. since using it I have not.This is my first outdoor grow and I was wondering about doing a fungicide or not since I have fans running on them all the time it's not raining on them and they aren't real dense. I don't get a lot of direct sunlight though, especially in the morning and we have really cool damp mornings in the mountains. Is the Cease you're talking about able to be used into late flower, and will it affect taste profile at all do you know? I am growing two plants with really strong orange terps in smell and taste and just don't want to risk losing or changing the flavor. I'd rather risk a small loss to bud rot if that might happen. Thanks for any advice you can give.
Is there ways to influence a more numerous wasp population?0
if you keep your wasp population up......that's the catapillars mortal enemy
Thanks for the reply. I have seen systemic botrytis in pictures only fortunately but I'm sure it's something I'll have to deal with at some point the longer I grow outdoors and the larger my plants get. We have just been so wet the last ten days I thought I was in the Pacific Northwest instead of the East coast. I live deep up in the woods though and the moths don't have a lot of lights around here to be drawn to so any of them nearby are drawn in like a beacon at night. Might be time to break out the ancient bug zapper from the 90s and put it about 100 yards away from the house. Draw them away and finish them off.The fans are a really good idea. I've been using them for a few years they really help alot. September and October are when the buds will get very dense and problems can happen. I honestly don't spray anything on them late in flower. In about 2 or 3 more weeks I will stop. harvest around 3rd week of October. Hopefully! if all goes well . I was using serenade fungicide for the last few years it was basically the same as cease. I have never even thought about it after harvest all the bud is great. If you were even worried about it you could wash your buds after harvest. Do a search there's alot of info on it. Anyway botrytis is not always losing a few buds. before using the serenade/cease I have lost whole plants. since using it I have not.
First time I've heard of it. Looks like it's a bacteria?I'm tank mixing Botanigard or LalStop with the BTk, Venerate, Regalia, instead of Cease.
Botanigard will attack pathogens as well as bugs and live on in the plant tissue, no one is applying that in flower or using it at all?
yeah quit spraying them with pesticides when you see them.....and leave a little water out for them...they'll do the rest...rather you know it or not.....they're actually cute little insects and yes they hurt if they get ya...Is there ways to influence a more numerous wasp population?
Wasps need water and wood pulp to build their nests- I frequently see them gnawing on the top of my fence and drinking from our bird bathyeah quit spraying them with pesticides when you see them.....and leave a little water out for them...they'll do the rest...rather you know it or not.....they're actually cute little insects and yes they hurt if they get ya...
i have 3 colonies on my property.........they drink from the dogs water, and i have plenty of wood that's down and i have for heating and cooking purposes....so they're happy little guysWasps need water and wood pulp to build their nests- I frequently see them gnawing on the top of my fence and drinking from our bird bath
I've got a bunch living in my seldom-used pickup's door jambsi have 3 colonies on my property..
So again, not dangerous in humans. Selfish yes, but that’s my primary interest. Though I will add, I spray it in the late evening so it is dried, and thus far less toxic, by the time they wake up.It kills bees