Spinosad for Thrips Eradication

bigbrew

Well-Known Member
I wanted to make a log of my recent struggle to get rid of these damn hellbeasts called thrips, that have been feasting on my babies.

It should be noted I am growing in 5 gallon DWC buckets with hydroton in net pots.

First, if you have thrips problems, stop reading this thread and read this study:

http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/gh-thrips.html#specialists

Now on to my experience...

At first I saw one retatded looking young leaf about a month in and simply thought it was a random odd growth. Well a week and a half later more of the leaves showed the same and quickly spread. I identified it as thrips (thanks to RIU). I read that Pyrethrin spray and mosquito dunks for the watering are the best. It was late at night so Home Depot was my only option. I rushed out and got the dunks and the only two things they had with Pyrethrins in it: Bonide Garden Dust, and Shultz's spray.

I put 1/4 of a dunk in each of the 5 gal buckets, and watered the hydroton with dunked water. And let me say this: I do not reccomend repeating this, as the dunk granules got all entangled in my roots and are still there. The dunks are more intended for soil users, as the thrips reproduce in the soil. And it did not seem to do much for controlling the thrips for DWC at least.

I used the Bonide Garden Dust by making a spray out of it. It left a green powder coating on the leaves that washed off easily with spraying regular water. This controlled the thrips well for about 5 days. I started to see activity again so I used the Shultz's spray and they stayed gone for about three days.

Then I read that Fox Farms dont bug me was the best brand of Pyrethrins, so I went and got that. Used it and again worked for about 5 days, onlt to see more thrips.

Next I got the hot shot strip, which seemed to work very well for the 2 days I had it. However the vast majority of people I talked to regarding those told me to get it out of there ASAP as the chemical fog it produces is in fact toxic, and the plant would easily absorb it. So the only thing that worked now goes bye bye.

Then I went and got Dr Doom Pyrethrin foggers. Both were used in rooms well under the max size for the cans. Again about 5 days later, FUCKING DONT KNOW WHEN TO DIE THRIPS, back to eating my babies.

After further research, it appears that Spinosad, a somewhat new treatment, is designed for caterpillars and is not as damaging to other natural bugs you may not want to kill.

The Spinosad product I used was called Green Light Lawn and Garden. It is very concentrated so blend carefully. It has been 5 days and so far absolutely no signs of thrips activity! I am about three weeks to harvest, so thank goodness I can hopefully stop using chemical sprays.

I also used blue thrip traps that dont ever seem to get anything on them except pieces of leaf that get ripped off the plants cause those bastards are so damn sticky. Also that study suggests that hot pink colored traps are more effective than blue, so if you can find some hot pink ones.

So in summary, save yourself a lot of stress and try Spinosad first.

I will post an update in a few more days with progress.
 

bigbrew

Well-Known Member
Just a quick update...

I treated with the Spinosad spray again about four days after the original spray. The reason was to get any hatching egg that might have not been killed originally.

I am still doing well on the thrips control with the Spinosad.

I think I am going to alternate weekly treatments with Spinosad and Pyrtherins to make sure those fuckers dont come back. I would like to halt all treatments during my last couple weeks of flower if possible.

By the way I cant find the hot pink sticky traps anywhere....any help on this ya'll?
 

bigbrew

Well-Known Member
I did see a tiny bit of thrips activity and gave a third spray. The research suggests that because of the egg laying cycle, you need to spray 3 times, 3-5 days apart. Becasue many of the eggs are protected under leaves and what not, so even when you kill the adults, the egg hatches and starts them over again, so you need to wait the few days for the eggs to hatch and spray again before the bastards reproduce again....
 

cowboylogic

Well-Known Member
I did see a tiny bit of thrips activity and gave a third spray. The research suggests that because of the egg laying cycle, you need to spray 3 times, 3-5 days apart. Becasue many of the eggs are protected under leaves and what not, so even when you kill the adults, the egg hatches and starts them over again, so you need to wait the few days for the eggs to hatch and spray again before the bastards reproduce again....
Nice post with great info. Thanks Brew and may I suggest after this harvest strip the grow room down and and bomb the hell out of it. Then after 3-5 days, bomb it again. The doctor doom works, but you need to use it like 3 times every 3-5 days to do as you said. Break the egg laying cycle. Female thrips can still lay viable eggs even if she finds no male to mate with. All of those eggs will become male thrips. They may be small but mother nature has trained them well in survival skills! Good luck and thanks again the informative post.
Welcome to RIU. Folks like you are an asset. +rep
 

bigbrew

Well-Known Member
Wow, thanks man. Im learning as I go here but as I look back its been a whirlwind. I got the Aerogarden free from a friend, started 6 seeds, kept 4, all turned out female! I kept adding shit constantly over the last couple months. Fox Farm nutes, Cal mag, sm90, 2 CFL Side lights, then a 400 watt HPS. Now have the flowering in the bathroom and the vegging in the master bedroom closet. I now have a mother in soil, 6 clones in a 5 gallon DIY bubble cloner, 4 plants vegging in a 10 gal DWC, 3 plants flowering under the 400 watt. the AG is sprouting an AK48. I also got some Aurora Indica and Papaya from Dr Chronic.

Ive turned from a stoner to a tweeker with this hobby! I mean I just obsess over it sometimes and am now learning to leave it alone more.

2 of my 3 flowering plants (all 5 gallon DWC) got root rot and are salvaged but have been stunted 5 weeks in to flower.

The thrips fucked me up good too, they got to one of the girls good when she was a little young and theres a lot of holes in leaves.

I nute burned them good once and I a Nitrogen deficiency and a calcium def.

So all in all its been an extreemely educational experiance and my fourth plant, which I topped, is very healthy.

Next one will be even better, but then again everyone says that and learns of new issues to manage...its been a blast, now just have to be disiplined to cure long enough!
 

edk3335

Member
Glad to have found this post. A little old but I think it will save my ladies. Currently battling caterpillars and thrips at the same time. Already killed my ChemDawg. :/ Never heard of Spinosad and I'm hoping I can eradicate both pests with it. So far they just swim in that Neem solution and seem unaffected.
 

hexthat

Well-Known Member
I don't use bacteria that produce poison, your better off just spraying the poison. GMOs... ha ha. Plus the crap in that stuff to feed and keep the bacteria alive smells like dirty ass socks. Just don't spray that shit in flowering.
 

Thai_Lights

Well-Known Member
250ML of isopropyl per 2L of water mixed with 100ml of insecticidal soap worked like a charm for me.
 
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