spider mites !! can peroxide fix this!!!!!!!!repppp rep

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
IF YOU actually READ my post past the point YOU don't like!
YOU would have seen HOW to your self!
Ok, so i googled your repoort and it nowhere says non hazardous to humans, you are just making shit up. As i said it is less harmful than many pesticides but still harmful to humans, thus the required PPE.

http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/docs/registration/ais/publicreports/5858.pdf

DPR’s evaluation of the acute toxicity studies indicates that these spiromesifen products are low in mammalian toxicity. DPR toxicologists determined that the differences in formulations between the two end-use products and BSN 2060 were unlikely to be of toxicological concern.

Table from the same site gives an Acute Toxicity Category of 3 for dermal/inhaled which is classified as SLIGHTLY TOXIC. Meaning it is harmful to humans, just not as harmful as many other pesticides, doesn't that sound exactly like what ive said all along?
 

explosive82

Well-Known Member
That's one 1of them

And people bitch that I cut and paste links too much!
Haha yea i was just trying to be helpful

I looked up testing req in my area and i found this http://public.health.oregon.gov/DiseasesConditions/ChronicDisease/MedicalMarijuanaProgram/documents/rules/333-007-0400-0410-Exhibit-A-Tables3-4.pdf

Would forbid/avid/floramite fail me if i used them in veg? like 10 weeks or so before harvest? I don't really understand how the ppm/residuals work in these so any information would be golden.
 

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
Haha yea i was just trying to be helpful

I looked up testing req in my area and i found this http://public.health.oregon.gov/DiseasesConditions/ChronicDisease/MedicalMarijuanaProgram/documents/rules/333-007-0400-0410-Exhibit-A-Tables3-4.pdf

Would forbid/avid/floramite fail me if i used them in veg? like 10 weeks or so before harvest? I don't really understand how the ppm/residuals work in these so any information would be golden.
Nah in veg throw anything you want at em. just dont spray anything once buds develop. If you have mites hit them with a systemic and a topical, like Avid and Floramite.
 

Cx2H

Well-Known Member
If I was a 6 year old post and wanted a modern answer I would hope you'd say: Ladybugs, vacuum and an evil laugh.
 

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
If I was a 6 year old post and wanted a modern answer I would hope you'd say: Ladybugs, vacuum and an evil laugh.
Vacuum is the best option when ur like 2 weeks from harvest, get in there and start vacuuming webs before they reach buds.
 

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
18 -20 days. It's translaminar (means that it is sprayed on the leaf surface and it goes through the leaf and settles on the bottom of them - right where the bastards feed!) and not systemic. It works as a lipid fat blocker in the insect and kills them the sameway insecticidal soaps do, by desiccation - it dries them out - It is effective on all stages of growth even effecting eggs! It is derived from an organic acid. It looses it's "organic label" due to the binder used to deliver it.

It is used on a massive scale growing on foods - Strawberries mostly. The concentrate strength in Forbid is 50% of the one used on food stuff's! In 5 different toxicology reports from college studies. It was found as "non harmful to humans"....other then possible skin and eye irritation from allergies to the concentrate/mix.

If you question an insecticide as being poisonous to people. Google the name of the insecticide "XXXXX toxicology reports" and you'll learn the truth - including effective life of etc.



FORBID is NOT!



NO, NO,NO! Sevin is NASTY shit! Here's a nice brief from a friends web site.

Why not use Sevin?

Human exposure, be it from direct skin contact, inhalation or ingestion, leads to nausea, impaired cognitive development and tremors. Higher incidences of Parkinson’s disease have been reported by the Harvard School of Public health and the Mayo Clinic. The American Veterinary Medical Association shows related cancer rates in dogs exposed to lawn care and garden chemicals. Other concerns: the compounds that make up Sevin are mutagens causing fetal abnormalities during pregnancy, reproductive dysfunctions in males and females, kidney and liver damage and behavioral problems in humans and animals. Carbaryl is an inhibitor of the cholinesterase enzyme, found in nervous tissue, red blood cells. It is also a carcinogen and has shown to induce DNA damage in humans, animals and plants. Breakdown of this chemical in the stomach, coupled with ingestion of sodium nitrate, a common food additive, forms nitrosocarbaryl, a more potent mutagenic compound.

Sevin is highly toxic to bees, aquatic invertebrates, and mollusks. Groundwater contamination and subsequent runoff affects the entire food chain. It also increases the toxicity of another common yard chemical, 2-4-D or Scotts Weed & Feed or Miracle Grow.

Sevin is never used by me for anything! EVER!
https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2013/01/16/2013-00728/spiromesifen-pesticide-tolerances

Spiromesifen was classified as having low acute toxicity via the oral, dermal and inhalation routes of exposure. It was neither an eye nor dermal irritant, but showed moderate potential as a skin contact sensitizer. In short- and long-term animal toxicity tests, the critical effects observed were loss of body weight, adrenal effects (discoloration, decrease in fine vesticulation, and the presence of cytoplasmic eosinophilia in zona fasciculata cells), thyroid effects (increased thyroid stimulating hormone, increased thyroxine binding capacity, decreased T3 and T4 levels, colloidal alteration and thyroid follicular cell hypertrophy), liver effects (increased alkaline phosphatase, alanine transaminase (ALT) and decreased cholesterol, and triglycerides), and spleen effects (atrophy, decreased spleen cell count, and increased macrophages). There were no developmental or reproductive effects of concern following oral administration of spiromesifen in rats or rabbits. EPA concluded that spiromesifen is not likely to be carcinogenic to humans based on a lack of evidence of cancer in bioassays in rats and mice. There were no in vivo or in vitromutagenic effects in mutagenicity testing with spiromesifen. Spiromesifen is not considered a neurotoxic chemical based on the chemical's mode of action and the available data from multiple studies, including acute and subchronic neurotoxicity studies.


These are mamalian studies id love to see the stuff you read on human toxicolody. Please link the university study that says its "non harmful to humans" because everything i read says it has low toxicity, but that means its still harmful. So telling people the shit is harmless is 100% BULLSHIT and irresponsible.
 

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
Your wrong! Sorry (not at this point) YOU should actually READ a tox report!
You need to take some Hort class's buddy! You're lacking on understanding......

I gotta go! I'll be back to refute any other drivel you post
4.2 Resistance management guidelines To prevent or delay resistance development it is strongly recommended to follow the IRAC (Insecticide Resistance Action Committee; www.irac-online.org) 496 Pflanzenschutz-Nachrichten Bayer 58/2005, 3 guideline especially published for spider mites (Wege and Leonard, 1994). Furthermore spiromesifen is an excellent resistance management tool in combination/rotation strategies with imidacloprid considering applications against whiteflies (Guthrie et al., 2003). The following general guidelines are recommended for use with spiromesifen: • The compound should be used only up to four times per cropping cycle on any one crop, and a combination/rotation with compounds from a different mode of action group is strongly recommended. • Use compound at manufacturer’s recommended rates and timings. The recommended dosage rates which reliably control pests under normal conditions should be used as recommended on the label. • Effective doses should be used when applying tank mixtures. • Ensure that uniform spray coverage is achieved. • Compounds should be used in such a way that detrimental effects on beneficial insects and mites are minimised. • Monitoring should be conducted to detect early signs of resistance. • If signs of reduced efficacy become evident, follow-up treatments should not be carried out with an active ingredient of the same chemical class.


While Forbid is great when used in combination with a systemic at preventing tolerance, it still happens all the fucking time. Thus the makers (Bayer) recommending you use MULTIPLE PRODUCTS to make sure you kill every mite and thus you prevent tolerance. The bullshit needs to stop being spewed. This website should spread correct information.
 

purplehays1

Well-Known Member
Great - here goes this shit again!

How about YOU read the toxicology reports your self! and I quote " found as not harmful to humans" in any normal application rate or concentration!

As far as packaging goes. THAT is a GENERIC FEDERAL MANDATE! Labeling on any insecticide IS a geralazation for the level it's rated. Forbid is a "Caution" level label ! It has almost NOTHING to due with just how toxic it is!
IT IS NOT A VERY HAZARDOUS CHEMICAL!

You must be a Republican for your affinity to spread fear and misinformation! :fire: READ THE FACTS! I TOLD YOU HOW!
U clearly have been proven wrong on both points, but i agree with your thinking, id rather use forbid than avid or floramite because it is much less toxic and highly effective.
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
Haha yea i was just trying to be helpful

I looked up testing req in my area and i found this http://public.health.oregon.gov/DiseasesConditions/ChronicDisease/MedicalMarijuanaProgram/documents/rules/333-007-0400-0410-Exhibit-A-Tables3-4.pdf

Would forbid/avid/floramite fail me if i used them in veg? like 10 weeks or so before harvest? I don't really understand how the ppm/residuals work in these so any information would be golden.
I'm not a fan of AVID or Flora........I liked Forbid better.....my choice.

All you have to do is put 8 - 10 drops of Forbid in a gallon of water. lightly mist the top surface's of the plant and in 5-7 they'll be gone.
I like to hit the media surface with a contact like neem or even a Pyreth to gat any in transit.
A nice once over the grow with a bleach sanitizing solution will help long term, no return.

I used forbid and cleaned the grow well and have not been reinfected for around 5 years.....

Forbid is THE thing for Russet and Broad mites.....
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
U clearly have been proven wrong on both points, but i agree with your thinking, id rather use forbid than avid or floramite because it is much less toxic and highly effective.
I gave you the key and supplied the links.....at the other post. There is a Euro study linked there too. They are MUCH harder on testing then our gov. We could go on pasting cuts from papers for hrs. We'll each look for only our point and you really have none anyway. Your to lazy to look mine up your self, and I'm not your Mama, so holding your hand and walking you through it - isn't happening!

tebya ne ebut, ti ne podmakhivai,,,mudak
 

Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
fixed it for you
They come out of the woodwork all too often when Forbid is mentioned!

He didn't have the mental capacity to figure out you can Google for tox reports - then quotes the one he favors, because I wouldn't take him by the hand and show him my self.

He didn't even figure out he can google the actual chemical name (Tetronic acid, one of a whole group of them - not the Bayer branded name) and find out even more!
Like it's an organic acid
It kills by blocking lipid fat absorption (same as insecticidal soaps) causing desiccation.
Can not be called organic because of the binder that's used to carry the actual acid....

One of those "don't use that ! it's a poison folks!" Didn't see him say anything about SEVIN earlier, and that's a "real" naughty insecticide!

Can't read a tox report for the concentrations used to test the mamilian tox responce either! The fact that those amounts are as high and higher then the concentraite being sold at the point of actually seeing any of the things he mentions...

Posts cuts from the fed. reports that are biased and over stated. Has NO real knowlege about the realities of the Federal labeling laws! He even listed Imid. in a post! With NO caution on that rather nasty insecticide! Neonictinoids (new ones for now) are NOT getting approval anymore by the Fed.! BAD JUJU!
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
@Dr. Who have any practical experience of storage life Forbid/Avid in the unmixed form? I'm reading maybe 2 years, could be extended with cold storage?
 
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Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
@Dr. Who have any practical experience of storage life Forbid/Avid in the unmixed form? I'm reading maybe 2 years, could be extended with cold storage?
I have had some for 5 years and gave a cpl of mixed gallons to a friend in march. Worked fine for him..I keep mine in a brown glass pressure caped little bottle. No evaporation to speak of and every time I go by it on my work bench shelf, I shake it......So I haven't found a shelf life yet...
 

RM3

Well-Known Member
They come out of the woodwork all too often when Forbid is mentioned!

He didn't have the mental capacity to figure out you can Google for tox reports - then quotes the one he favors, because I wouldn't take him by the hand and show him my self.

He didn't even figure out he can google the actual chemical name (Tetronic acid, one of a whole group of them - not the Bayer branded name) and find out even more!
Like it's an organic acid
It kills by blocking lipid fat absorption (same as insecticidal soaps) causing desiccation.
Can not be called organic because of the binder that's used to carry the actual acid....

One of those "don't use that ! it's a poison folks!" Didn't see him say anything about SEVIN earlier, and that's a "real" naughty insecticide!

Can't read a tox report for the concentrations used to test the mamilian tox responce either! The fact that those amounts are as high and higher then the concentraite being sold at the point of actually seeing any of the things he mentions...

Posts cuts from the fed. reports that are biased and over stated. Has NO real knowlege about the realities of the Federal labeling laws! He even listed Imid. in a post! With NO caution on that rather nasty insecticide! Neonictinoids (new ones for now) are NOT getting approval anymore by the Fed.! BAD JUJU!
Tis also used ON humans as a skin peel 8)

Forbid is 40 some %
Oberon is 23 %

And this freaking skin creme for humans is 12 % for $16 for 1.6 oz's

http://www.drugstore.com/alpha-hydrox-aha-souffle-12-glycolic-aha/qxp141163?catid=182992

The active ingredient in forbid is a tetronic acid, well so is Alpha Hydroxy, a tetronic acid that is
 
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