Contain the grass if you can, either by removing or mowing.....tall grass can support more bad guys.I'll try the peppermint with water for now, probably just gonna get some bt and spray in the budding stage for preventative maintenance when the time comes. And as far as I know there's no pest problem as of right now but the plants are by some tall grass, should I spray the grass for pests?
That sounds like a borer instead of a caterpillar you can wrap the stalk with nylon screen where they usually bore in. research borers and there may be a natural predator or bio insecticide that would take care of them.I read someone post no caterpillar is going to hurt your plants in veg. Not wanting to argue, we have a caterpillar that bores into the thick stem and eats its way up. I get them about mid June- end June. The will kill quick. Cutworms,army worms? I'm not sure offhand what they are called. Some years are better than others.
This is the northeast U.S. where I'm at. In the fall I don't get any caterpillars like people on west coast. Not everyone has the same environment.
I would spray them suckers fast also.kyI've been finding eggs all over my buds. I'm getting bt from home Depot today. Lowe don't sell it at all. But first I'm going to wear gloves and try to smash as many eggs as possible...I'm not going to sit around and wait for them to hatch...
What is the best to spray for mites and catipillers and things like that?thank you for any info you can give me..kyOmri is not certified to judge what came from genetically modified stock. It does not degrade quickly and Im sorry if you find this a convenient product. It is deadly even after dried. It is deadly for many species. If you have real research, as you seem to wish me to believe you have read, please provide it. I am a biochemist and more then certified to speak on what I speak. I am also very well schooled in the endocrine system. I would be happy to discuss this further though my position is it is not safe at all.
www.gorillagrow.org
This will kill microbes and fungi which protect the plant, give true quality and much much more. Your creating work for your self. Yes the earwigs are likely out of control as you decimated your nematodes. Do you know what they are and why they are important?
Soaps and oils never did work for me and I will spray whater to keep from loosing my hard earned crop for its a lot of dam work to just give away to bugs when you can kill them..ky..I like your thinkingYour biology credentials are oriented to this field more than my own. I respect your position, just quite a bit of information conflicts with that position.
I go here for information usually:
http://npic.orst.edu/factsheets/spinosadgen.html
https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2015/12/28/2015-32168/spinosad-pesticide-tolerances#h-14
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinosad
However, I noticed this time around linking wickpedia that they have added severe toxicology for bees. We knew about during spraying but apparently it is the residue also. They say to rinse a day or two after application now. I was not aware of the new information.
I will say this. I tried using nothing but soaps and oils when we first started on the property. Our entire first crops went in the bin. Since then I have used spinosad lightly and BT later in the season for worms to great success. I still have a lot of life on the property and the soil makes mycelium web on top quite often. Lots of worms in the soil.
My entire area has had problems with earwigs not just myself... LOL
Side note. DE is deadly to bees also! It is also a non-discriminate insecticide but has no efficacy once wet.
My plants do need phosphorus to grow to become there best when budding.What do you use if not phosphorus?I also use lot of chicken poop and rabbit poop and bat poop but phosphorus in ferts also helps lots jmo..kyI think some have an issue poisoning the plant with phosphorus and infusing it into the tissue where it produces its caustic effect that some growers desire for profit reason despite modern knowledge or ethical issues. This amazingly limits the mycorrhizae covering that would otherwise protect the plants. I pulled some caterpillars off the plant though have no chewing at present time. Then again I grow for quality which only comes with a diverse ecosystem. If it kills bees and such as well it is killing much of the balance that would lead way to quality or worry free growing. The industry is fuelled by money. I have had fertiliser products and am familiar with the mentality of the ones who produce the most "organic" fertiliser in this country. Ray Olsen owns the company. Like I said I would be pissed smoking that. If I knew it was on it I would never touch it. All sorts of folks in this world and with them all different standards. May I ask if any of you work at a hydro shop or get your advice from one? No offence they told you phosphorus was great too I imagine