Best way to get rid of gnat problem??

Smokey_mc_pot

Active Member
Mosquito Dunks every time u water/feed... or my fav way

Ka.......me.......hame.........HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

If that fails...anything short of KaioKen x10 will fail
Yeah I've already used mosquito dunks and they're not an effective method for me
 

rayuki

Well-Known Member
Yellow stick cards at pot level is the cheapest way it takes 2 to 3 weeks but you will see the population go down drastically immediately. If you aren't hanging at pot level though they will be less effective
This won't kill the larvae in the soil though and that's the real issue cause they eat the roots.
 

Kronickeeper

Well-Known Member
This won't kill the larvae in the soil though and that's the real issue cause they eat the roots.
They won't kill the larvae but the adults don't reproduce and lay eggs when they are dead by controlling the adult population you diminish their numbers that's why it takes a few weeks to completely get rid of them. I've tried most of the ways mentioned and that is whats been the most effective for me. Even if you use food grade DE and water from the bottom they willl just migrate from the top layer of soil to the bottom of the pot.
 

Photon Flinger

Well-Known Member
It also really helps to create an environment gnats hate. I put a box fan on the floor blowing directly at my pots. They can't fly around. Let your soil dry out between waterings. Put a layer of sand over your soil. Use yellow sticky traps, mosquito dunks etc. Hit them hard!

Good air flow helps with a lot of things. Lowers temps, eliminates the need for CO2 and keeps flying critters out.
 

johny22

Well-Known Member
I heard azamax works, also gnatarol and go gnats. Any other ones that are highly effective? I need something or a method to clean these fuckers out for good. Right now I'm using mosquito bits but they suck ass and are doing nothing for the girls. I'm doing soil drenches also I'm layering the top soil with it. Any help is appreciated thanks.
Go home depot get a bag of Coarse sand the rough and gritty type, get a dish for your pot to sit on and a bag of pebbles. Now fill the top of your pot with 2-3 inches thick of sand and fill the bottom tray with pebbles. When you water your plant the sand and soil will mix a bit don't worry about it.now the gnats can't bury into soil to lay and even if a few manage to get through there larvae is gonna cut itself up against the coarse sand, pebble on the bottom coz once they get blocked from the top they will try to go through the pot holes.
 

Smokey_mc_pot

Active Member
Hey guys I'm telling you My Method worked what I did was vacuum the top layer of my soil then foliar spray the top after vacuuming. I then add a new top layer but make sure all of this is done when soil is pretty much dried out so you can do a drench with gognats after adding a new top layer of soil. After applying the drench I then add a layer of the gnat nix and put the sticky traps around the floor of my cabinet because that's where they mainly hung out. Now not a pesky gnat insight I had a pretty heavy infestation and this method really worked for me hope somebody can have the same results.
 

aquanaut

Well-Known Member
I have tried everything under the sun to get rid of a gnat infestation and can honestly say the only thing that has worked was using Gnatrol WDG from Amazon or EBay. At first I was doing the lower end of dosage per gallon of feed and wasn't seeing great results. I got fed up and started to use it every-single-watering at maximum dosage. Am finally gnat free, as a preventative measure, I use it every watering still. It's cheap and ensures I have a solid run.

The area I live in is always moist with a greenbelt that collects run off. We always have gnats in the area and yards are usually infested so I have to keep on the Gnatrol every watering to ensure things are legit. During the cold winters I can usually tone it down.
 

rayuki

Well-Known Member
is this a gnat? it was alive so figured id take a photo of it before squishing the fucker but not sure it wasn't black like the others i've seen.

 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
Captain Jack's spray. It cures everything man. No shit. EVERYTHING.

Spray every 3 days and in two weeks the gnats, eggs, everything will be gone.
 

Buba Blend

Well-Known Member
is this a gnat? it was alive so figured id take a photo of it before squishing the fucker but not sure it wasn't black like the others i've seen.

This is a gnat too!
A couple of weeks ago I was a bit of a mental case and named this gnat Charlie on another thread about gnats. After the picture I sent him or her flying off to have some fun while time permitted. I knew I only was going to have them for a short stint after transplanting to new soil. I would see and kill about 4 or 5 a day 2 weeks ago with soapy water spray. Did nothing to get rid of them except to water properly, they are gone.
100_5502.JPG
 

rayuki

Well-Known Member
That almost looks like a termite. You're not in an area with wood framing right nearby are you? (Basement for instance)
not really, inside in a room with carpet though. i figured i might have tracked it into the tent cause i couldn't see anymore just this one little bugger. and it doesn't look like any fungus gnat pics ive seen closeup on google lol
 

soymilk

Member
I'm battling gnats for two years now. I have trayed everything I could find DE, namatodes, top layer sand method with fabric pots, yellow stick cards, uv, etc. but nothing worked. It's slows them down but I never could completely get rid off them.
I'm about to start my new grow and I'm planning to spray shit load of the neem oil on them and if that's not working I'm switching to mapito.
Good luck to all.
 
Top