Spider Mite Control

Hayduke

Well-Known Member
Found a vital tool in the fight against mites.

It's a petroleum based suffocant, and it kills eggs. It may or may not kill 100% of the eggs, but it's the only thing that will kill eggs, and the mites can't become immune to it. I'd recommend using it on every treatment in conjunction with whatever else you're using.
Hort oil is nothing new...whether you use a petrol based oil or a veggie/seed based oil, they both do the same thing. The pre-packaged hort oil contains an emulsifier, where previously a little soap was added.

Although it provides SOME ovicidal benefit...you absolutely cannot spray and go about your business...you still need to spray every few days depending on temp, # of different groups of life stages you have (could have eggs hatching daily or every 5 days)

I would not want to spray petroleum on my buds...so in flower use another oil! Safflower is probably the lightest...I use organic hemp oil when necessary.

As for what kills eggs (and all other stages of insect life including soil-borne larvae)...bag up plants, suck air out with vacuum, fill up like balloons with CO2...tie up for 24 hours...all bugs dead.

clear bags are available...do not fill too fast as the gas is cold and can frost damage! (filling two large bags at once I damaged the second bag a bit, but WAY better than the mites) This can be done with all stages from seedlings to cut harvested bud. One time shot.:mrgreen:...no residual poison.

I have very little infestation.

Appreciate the answer. :blsmoke:
This will not be the case for long!

Oh...and welcome [Artemus] ClydeFrog...to the wild wild west!

:leaf::peace::leaf:
 

DannyGreenEyes

Well-Known Member
Hort oil is nothing new...whether you use a petrol based oil or a veggie/seed based oil, they both do the same thing. The pre-packaged hort oil contains an emulsifier, where previously a little soap was added.

Although it provides SOME ovicidal benefit...you absolutely cannot spray and go about your business...you still need to spray every few days depending on temp, # of different groups of life stages you have (could have eggs hatching daily or every 5 days)

I would not want to spray petroleum on my buds...so in flower use another oil! Safflower is probably the lightest...I use organic hemp oil when necessary.

As for what kills eggs (and all other stages of insect life including soil-borne larvae)...bag up plants, suck air out with vacuum, fill up like balloons with CO2...tie up for 24 hours...all bugs dead.

clear bags are available...do not fill too fast as the gas is cold and can frost damage! (filling two large bags at once I damaged the second bag a bit, but WAY better than the mites) This can be done with all stages from seedlings to cut harvested bud. One time shot.:mrgreen:...no residual poison.



This will not be the case for long!

Oh...and welcome [Artemus] ClydeFrog...to the wild wild west!

:leaf::peace::leaf:
Copying & pasting from http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/cg002 run by the University of FL. This was linked by a site run by the FL Dept of Agriculture & Univ of S FL Horticulture Dept. http://entomology.ifas.ufl.edu/creatures/

Anyway, here's the quote........ Need for controlling spider mites is based on temperature and humidity conditions, spider mite population levels, tree vigor, and time of the year. Petroleum oil provides some ovicidal activity against spider mite eggs. None of the other miticides provide ovicidal activity, and their residual activity must be sufficiently long-lasting to kill subsequently emerging larvae.

I don't think the other Hort Oils have the same ovicidal effect. If they did, I would think the site would have mentioned it.

Bonide makes one called All Seasons and they're an old & respected company. So I'm sure if there were any side effects they wouldn't be making it.

I used it myself and it made my leaves softer, almost like I put moisturizer on it.

If I was in flower, I'd use Mite Destroyers or Predatory Mites on Spider Mites depending on how close I was to harvest (predatory mites take time to colonize).

That said, I have white mites. Very little research has been done on them. Broad Mites are a pain but Cyclamen Mites are worse. Every thing I read on them says to just throw the plant away. I'm not sure which I have because they look the same. They have different looking eggs, but I haven't been able to find any to look at under a microscope.

Anyway, point is the lady bugs and various hort oils I've been using has kept them off the plants for the most part (lady bugs rule) and have been keeping them on the edge of extinction. So if worse comes to worse, I'll keep the lady bugs & hort oils going till harvest.

But I'm going to make one last ditch effort to kill them off. The Colorado State Univ suggested these predatory mites since they have been proven to feed on a wide variety of mites...... Metaseiulus occidentalis, Mesoseiulus longpipes, Neoseiulus barkeri, Neoseiulus Californicus, Neoseiulus fallacis, and Phytoseiulus persimilis.
Nothing has ever been proven to kill white mites but this is probably my best shot.

As far as the Spider Mites, early on I caught Spider Mites, White Mites, & Fungus Gnats all at the same time. I sprayed with Mite X (another hort oil) and released 3,000 lady bugs and that's the last I saw of the Spider Mites or Fungus Gnats. That's why I said that Lady Bugs rule. I just wish they'd finish off their food supply, if they did I'm sure the White Mites would be gone too. I hope the predatory mites I choose are as effective.
 

Hayduke

Well-Known Member
I have bonide...summer oil is summer oil. It is food grade...but I do not like the crap they spray on veggies to make them shinny, and I can wash that! I grow organically and the other oils work, but they will clog up your sprayer over time. The light summer oil will not and is less likely to disrupt transpiration. Because I do not want oil on my buds...even hemp oil...I tried the CO2 after using it in college genetics class to work with Drosophila. CO2 works on all stages in one shot (remove the ladybugs before gassing!)

The only time I have not had ladybugs, I got spider mites...but mine would starve to death before eating FG's or thrips.

IMO the spider mites will eventually get ahead of you...maybe not this grow, but eventually if you do not do something more drastic.

The University studies are done on orchard and field crops rather than indoors...a pest issue is a bit different indoors.

:leaf::peace::leaf:
 

NewGrowth

Well-Known Member
I recieved a tip from a fellow grower on keeping lady bugs alive when their food source is gone. He said they will eat crushed grapes!
 

DannyGreenEyes

Well-Known Member
I have bonide...summer oil is summer oil. It is food grade...but I do not like the crap they spray on veggies to make them shinny, and I can wash that! I grow organically and the other oils work, but they will clog up your sprayer over time. The light summer oil will not and is less likely to disrupt transpiration. Because I do not want oil on my buds...even hemp oil...I tried the CO2 after using it in college genetics class to work with Drosophila. CO2 works on all stages in one shot (remove the ladybugs before gassing!)

The only time I have not had ladybugs, I got spider mites...but mine would starve to death before eating FG's or thrips.

IMO the spider mites will eventually get ahead of you...maybe not this grow, but eventually if you do not do something more drastic.

The University studies are done on orchard and field crops rather than indoors...a pest issue is a bit different indoors.

:leaf::peace::leaf:
The guy I chatted with at the CO State Univ asked me if it was indoor or outdoor.

The lady bugs that I had actually went digging after the FG larvae. I guess it depends on the strain of lady bugs that you're using. And I have a picture of a lady bug eating a thrip. Again, probably depends on the species of lady bug.

CO2 is a great way to get rid of any pest, if you can do it safely. I wont recommend anything that could get someone killed, and there are some people out there that shouldn't play with things that can be so dangerous. That being said, if you're compitent enough to use it without poisoning yourself, then CO2 would be the best solution to any infestation.
 

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mugetsu

Member
should I spray with water after application?
if yes how long should I wait?
I would wait til after your lights turn off to prevent any burning and so the azamax/azatrol doesnt dissolve quickly giving it time to kill the mites, then give them a fresh water spray when the lights turn back on, works for me, but i also mix in purespray green for egg and disease control and it also does good.
 

NewGrowth

Well-Known Member
should I spray with water after application?
if yes how long should I wait?
You don't need to rinse the azamax it just has a very light carrier oil that is absorbed into the leaf tissue. One or two applications should provide enough control to get you through flower.
 
After the infestation is under control, what is the best thing to help your plants recover? Time? I am at about week 2 on veg using a Turbo garden ebb/flow system. They are in much better shape then when i found the mites 5 days ago, they are just a little bit on the light green/yellow color. Is this normal? Should i let the plant heal itself? should i add a little bit of chemicals to it? opinions?
 

NewGrowth

Well-Known Member
After the infestation is under control, what is the best thing to help your plants recover? Time? I am at about week 2 on veg using a Turbo garden ebb/flow system. They are in much better shape then when i found the mites 5 days ago, they are just a little bit on the light green/yellow color. Is this normal? Should i let the plant heal itself? should i add a little bit of chemicals to it? opinions?
Just let them grow damage foliage will never heal. B-1 is often helpful with shock as well. :peace:
 

din'e medicine

Active Member
I'd say, if the buds are good, then grow what you could, till the leaves fall off. But if the buds are dieing, turning brown, chop it down.
 
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