You'll see the little mongrels.JoeFish said:How will I know when I get aphids this spring?
And Joefish, do your best to catch them before they attack the leaves this bad! Like with anything the sooner the better..judohero said:you will notice them they like to hid on the back of the leaf and the leafs will start to look sticky and sick.
I will keep a watchful eye!Pepperjack91 said:You'll see the little mongrels.
And Joefish, do your best to catch them before they attack the leaves this bad! Like with anything the sooner the better..
I feel like you should be especially alert for them as your plants start to flower. I noticed last year that they would cluster on the stems of the flowers and suck on them till they drop. It ruined my super hot harvest last year.. Live and learn.
I'll post some pics, but you'll know if and when you have them.JoeFish said:How will I know when I get aphids this spring?
I am testing for that right now. I sprayed a Tabasco plant and left it out in the light to see the extent of damage if any that would occur, before spraying the entire grow. I will however take precautions and spray after lights out. with room temp at 82 and fan running all night residue will be gone before sunrise.maximumcapsicum said:Be sure to rinse this stuff off after a spray; it can burn pepper leaves just slightly!
Take them outside, spray top, bottom, sides.HP22BH said:gotta watch what you use indoors
I think lady bugs work wonders. Like astonishingly well. You can order a container of them for pretty cheap. I watched about 10 ladybugs completely wipe out an infestation on one of my over wintered plants. It was a sight to behold.Gotrox said:Read the warnings.
If you have fish, you really don't want to be spraying it indoors.
Just because it says "natural botanicals" doesn't mean it isn't a poison.
Castor beans and poppies are natural too, but extracts of them make Ricin and heroin, pretty foxgloves make digitalis, a heart medicine or fast killer.
50/50 on seedlings. If it's just a few plants, get rid of them.
If it's an infestation, lady bugs are best, but if none available (or you don't want to be finding hundreds of little dead bugs all over the house--unless you can seal off a room) pyretherin is your best bet for a 1 or 2 shot aphid armageddon.
The smaller the plants, the harder they are stressed by bug killers.
Applied properly---all sides and every nook and cranny, on large plants, my experience is they get upset for a week or so, lose some leaves, and generally stall out.
Indoors, you will likely have to do it twice.
Once for the ones on the plants, again in a week or so to get the ones that were hiding elsewhere and newly hatched eggs that escaped the first shot.
Maybe you can get them cheap in season, but, by the time you pay for next day or 2nd day air, they're not so cheap anymore.Pepperjack91 said:I think lady bugs work wonders. Like astonishingly well. You can order a container of them for pretty cheap. I watched about 10 ladybugs completely wipe out an infestation on one of my over wintered plants. It was a sight to behold.If you decide to use them, then get down really close to the plant and watch as they start attacking aphids. It's pretty exciting.
This stuff is awesome. This is what I used last week. Dead on contact.HP22BH said: