It is obvious that no one on this thread knows how to deal with mites. Stop with all the homemade solutions. Oh and yellow sticky stripes won't do a damn thing. LOL. Mites are not going to walk away from a plant to see what the yellow sticky thing is all about. So those of you that say they help STOP giving bad advise. As a matter of fact if you don't have good solid advice don't say anything at all. Without being too long winded about this I'll share with you how to get rid of mites.
1. Keep your grow area clean.
2. Don't wear clothes in your garden that you wore in another growers garden or in an outside garden.
3. Make your own clones. If you have to get clones from another grower assume that it has mites, powdery mildew etc. and quarantine it in another room of the house or growsite until it is deemed safe. Experienced growers can do this in a week or two. Longer for others who aren't as aware.
4. Keep ambient room temperatures at 70 or lower. A mites life cycle at 65 F is about 30 days. At 80 F it's about 3 days. Mites love it hot and dry.
5. Manuel removal of infested parts. Even the whole plant. I've tossed 2-3 plants in a harvest to protect the integrity of the others. Dry microfiber clothes are a great way to manually remove webbing and mites from the plants.
6. Use proven effective miticides and rotate them. I use Shuttle O, Forbid 4F, Avid, Azamax, then Cold Pressed Neem Oil. I use and rotate these every 5 days at the first sing of mites. continue to spray for a few weeks after the last sight of the mites. (Not using proven effective miticides not only doesn't get rid of mites but can make them resistant to the chemical you are using. As well as not using the proper concentration of effective miticides)
7. DO NOT USE bug bombs. They will burn your plants.
8. Spray with cold water between miticides.
9. Use a wand sprayer to achieve complete coverage. Wand sprayers have enough pressure to was
10. Small plants (1 gallon or smaller pots) can be dipped into a bucket of solution to get complete coverage.