greasemonkeymann
Well-Known Member
I appreciate the advice, albeit a tad more condescending than i'd prefer..Actually once you battle them enough and learn how they reproduce you will find that spider mites actually are not that hard to get rid of.It's hard work but not rocket science.Obviously using weekly preventatives like neem and lavender oil will keep them away but once you have them it is simply a matter of being diligent with your routine.Neem doesn't kill on contact so it is not a good idea to use on an outbreak.Now lavender oil kills them and their eggs almost immediately.I've helped many folks in their grow ops eradicate full infestations with lavender alone.
I have tried a lot of different products but they tend to either not work or just too expensive to keep applying.I had been told about lavender oil but was very skeptical of using it as I thought it just couldn't do what they claimed.I wish I would of listened a lot earlier,it would of saved me a lot of money and a lot headaches.
I have tried lavender, peppermint, habanero, neem, miticides (like five types), mighty wash, clean leaf, citrus sprays, garlic sprays, onion, basil, organic tobacco, silica and compost teas (surprisingly effective) any and every pyrethrin/azhiradactrin on the damn market..(sure i'm misspelling that), it's not killing the mites or their eggs that is the problem, it's the fact that I grow in a forest, in a shed, that is impossible to makes sealed (not sure i'd want it do be, the forest is damp..)
so I get two spot, these weird black ones, brown mites (the smaller ones that almost look like a fuzzy brown mold) and now this last year, russet mites.
It's KEEPING them away that is a bitch.
I can't constantly spray them because of the aforementioned damp forest I grow in, coan't run a dehumidifier because of the amperage draw.
So yea... it's not rocket science...but