TheLastWood
Well-Known Member
So I was swapping out my co2 tank yesterday and pickin up a few things from my local hydro. A customer started askin me about bulbs, co2, and then spidermites. I told him so far I've never really had a bad mite problem (knock on wood) but I have heard good things about neem.and pyrethrin. Then the store employee chimed in "you could just open the valve on a co2 tank all the way till its empty and once it gets to like 10k ppm it will sufocate all the mites."
I didn't want to disagree with him right in front of the custoner because I don't know if that's common peactice? But I said, yeah you should probably go with some spray before you do that. And while I'm pretty sure it would kill the mites it could also kill you. I told him you want about 1500ppm to benefit your plants, and 2000 ppm will start to kill them. 5000 ppm will knock you out cold. I said I wouldn't use the co2 that way but if you do you need to be very careful, only let the co2 stay in there for a little while and then ventilate the area outside very well.
Then the clerk said "yeah just empty the bottle then ventilate it like an hour later"
Does anyone do this? It seems like an extremely dangerous, expensive and unnecesary way to kill mites. Especially when this guy was asking me basic questions about co2 and I'm sure he doesn't even have a regulator or ppm meter.
I didn't want to disagree with him right in front of the custoner because I don't know if that's common peactice? But I said, yeah you should probably go with some spray before you do that. And while I'm pretty sure it would kill the mites it could also kill you. I told him you want about 1500ppm to benefit your plants, and 2000 ppm will start to kill them. 5000 ppm will knock you out cold. I said I wouldn't use the co2 that way but if you do you need to be very careful, only let the co2 stay in there for a little while and then ventilate the area outside very well.
Then the clerk said "yeah just empty the bottle then ventilate it like an hour later"
Does anyone do this? It seems like an extremely dangerous, expensive and unnecesary way to kill mites. Especially when this guy was asking me basic questions about co2 and I'm sure he doesn't even have a regulator or ppm meter.