Has anyone used this as a pesticide? I've read that this is pretty effective for leaf eaters and other crawling insects.
Would like your opinions on this and your application methods.
thanks.
Diatamatious Earth is used as a soil additive to keep those pesky dirt bugs at bay. It is NOT a pesticide as such, but rather it is tiny volcanic particles that work by cutting the flesh of bugs as they bruch against it in their digging, making it an enviroment that bugs find unpleasant. I always use it in my gardening. The negative slant on using it is that it makes earthworms go away as well.
Weeeeeeeeeeell, to be more acurate, not that it matters but de is not volcanic. It is comprised of prehistoric shells from diatoms which were tiny little crustacions. There is a volcanic substitute that may or may not work the same way which is a mechanical abrasive action that cuts the bug in a thousand places and he dies a horrible and hopefully painfull death. It's supposed to work on ants also and I used it as I have quite a bunch of ants up here in my own private Idaho. Sometimes they moved on sometimes they didn't. It is organic and supposedly you can eat it so it can't hurt to try it. I think it would work well on the plant and in the pot as a barrierDiatamatious Earth is used as a soil additive to keep those pesky dirt bugs at bay. It is NOT a pesticide as such, but rather it is tiny volcanic particles that work by cutting the flesh of bugs as they bruch against it in their digging, making it an enviroment that bugs find unpleasant. I always use it in my gardening. The negative slant on using it is that it makes earthworms go away as well.
Yes, I have. In fact, I used to use it on my dogs for fleas. Works great.Has anyone used this as a pesticide? I've read that this is pretty effective for leaf eaters and other crawling insects.
Would like your opinions on this and your application methods.
thanks.