Dr.Pecker
Well-Known Member
A lot of that stuff will toast your plants if the light hits them when wet.why dim the lights?
A lot of that stuff will toast your plants if the light hits them when wet.why dim the lights?
Thats a nice unit for outdoor but they make an electric one for indoor use. Its an atomizer that runs on an extension cord and doesnt give off gas burning fumes. 240$ i think from amazon. Its called a mosquito fogger.How you use the hotshot strip makes the difference. Late in flower's probably not a very good idea. I would give it a few weeks to air the plants out if you had to. I think its the same stuff they put in a flea collar, poor dogie. My flowers are cut and I'm doing clean up. I'm going to clean everything.View attachment 3531095
If you live in a spot where it freezes outside for a good chunk of the year youll have a better chance at keeping them gone because the outside ones die. If you live somewhere that it only freezes sometimes and it doesnt freeze one year, its going to be a bad year for mites.I never wear the shoes I was wearing outdoors, or working in the yard specifically, into my home. Maybe those suckers cld jump onto one of my cats, but mites have never been a problem for me. I think I have a ton of beneficial spiders that zap em if the appear. One reason I don't like pest strips is it would kill off my beneficial critters, spiders and such.
good point. It freezes here always. guess I could be a little more thankful for harsh winters now. thanks manIf you live in a spot where it freezes outside for a good chunk of the year youll have a better chance at keeping them gone because the outside ones die. If you live somewhere that it only freezes sometimes and it doesnt freeze one year, its going to be a bad year for mites.
The best thing ive found for spider mites is ladybugs. Hands down. If you run a sealed room theyre easy and cheap. 10 bucks gets you 1500 and that will last two weeks to a month or more in a huge tent. They wont eliminate the problem completely right away, but they work so well you wont see any more damage. Just make sure all the escape holes are covered.good point. It freezes here always. guess I could be a little more thankful for harsh winters now. thanks man
It can harm them. Best to rinse plant with water, after spray down.sasy just use a 50-50 mix if dish soap and water - then watch them slide off - no harm to plant
or maybe you shouldn't spray under high intensity lightsI've sprayed with soapy water, and it cooked my leafs or made yellow blotches. Under my lights, Then again. I make my mix stronger.
I don't, but I do put them back under.or maybe you shouldn't spray under high intensity lights
Broad mites are a different monster all together definitely treat again. They crawl through leaf veins so contact sprays wont really hurt them. some people use a hot water bath, I'm not really sure how to do it though.Sprayed my plants with Avid today for the broad mite problem. I did about 1/5 tsp per my liter spray bottle. That seemed to be the correct ratio according to the package. I sprayed the shit out if them top and bottom but I'm sure I missed something. So what now? More Avid? Neem? Nothing? I'm going to veg for another month probably. Here they are this weekend.View attachment 3535539