Matt Rize
Hashmaster
Oh man, that sucked, what a ride. I haven't had to deal with mites in forever, and put my trust in the wrong clone vendor. Well, this round of blackberry kush clones was an extra bitch to procure. The Blackberry Kush is an auto flower strain that is also clone only. This means its hella hard to find, IMO. Even harder to find cuts that are not flowering already.
So when I got this round of babies (1x1" potting soil) I skipped my usual quarantine step (dip), DUMMY! The guy said no problems, he said he dipped, I was being a dummy and just planted into 4.2 gallons of soil-less mix (only for autoflower strains). During transplant I noticed something horrible... dirt sticking to the undersides of the leaves. That only means trouble. Then I heard from another friend about his problem with the dreaded super mites. Turns out, JERK, he has had super-mite issues. The supposed local version of spider-mites that is indestructible.
So I know the routine, the options, how to deal with mites ect. and I have the tools. Thanks to you all
I thought I would test that new SNS217, the rosemary oil product labeled as a spider-mite solution. Soaked the undersides and tops. Did not do a damn thing, nothing. Sha!
Then I went neem, my longtime best friend. Also nothing.
So I went and did something that makes me want to puke, and got a doktor doom spray can, ugh. The guy at the store checked the strength and said babies should make it through. Fogged the shit out of them, all over. Saw some results, but not like I was expecting. Adults and juves made it through the fog. wtf. I was like, EFFING SUPER MITES.
Next, drastic times call for drastic measures. I got a bomb, bad one, one of them Attain poison bombs. I couldn't get myself to set it off...argh ethics.
New game plan time. I trimmed off almost the entire plant, everything except the top three nodes, remember they are just babies anyways. This got rid of most of the eggs. Then I switched pyrethrin products to one that was a little stronger. Same hair spray can, but 33% stronger at .3%. Gave another spray, repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat, every day until no signs of super-mite life. Phew.
Now they look like freshly rooted clones, but with a huge root system and they are a few inches taller than when I got them.
Next time I'm getting different cuts, sha! And dipping! Lessons learned the hard way are the ones you remember.
So when I got this round of babies (1x1" potting soil) I skipped my usual quarantine step (dip), DUMMY! The guy said no problems, he said he dipped, I was being a dummy and just planted into 4.2 gallons of soil-less mix (only for autoflower strains). During transplant I noticed something horrible... dirt sticking to the undersides of the leaves. That only means trouble. Then I heard from another friend about his problem with the dreaded super mites. Turns out, JERK, he has had super-mite issues. The supposed local version of spider-mites that is indestructible.
So I know the routine, the options, how to deal with mites ect. and I have the tools. Thanks to you all

I thought I would test that new SNS217, the rosemary oil product labeled as a spider-mite solution. Soaked the undersides and tops. Did not do a damn thing, nothing. Sha!
Then I went neem, my longtime best friend. Also nothing.
So I went and did something that makes me want to puke, and got a doktor doom spray can, ugh. The guy at the store checked the strength and said babies should make it through. Fogged the shit out of them, all over. Saw some results, but not like I was expecting. Adults and juves made it through the fog. wtf. I was like, EFFING SUPER MITES.
Next, drastic times call for drastic measures. I got a bomb, bad one, one of them Attain poison bombs. I couldn't get myself to set it off...argh ethics.
New game plan time. I trimmed off almost the entire plant, everything except the top three nodes, remember they are just babies anyways. This got rid of most of the eggs. Then I switched pyrethrin products to one that was a little stronger. Same hair spray can, but 33% stronger at .3%. Gave another spray, repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat, every day until no signs of super-mite life. Phew.
Now they look like freshly rooted clones, but with a huge root system and they are a few inches taller than when I got them.
Next time I'm getting different cuts, sha! And dipping! Lessons learned the hard way are the ones you remember.