dsm600rr said:Lol - in the FAQ it says to spray the leaves with water and dish soap. I only see them on that one leaf though.
dsm600rr said:I plucked the leaf they were on, Added one tbsp dish soap to a gallon of water and sprayed all my plants.
SwedishGhost said:When you say "dish soap"... What exactly do you mean then? Do you mean dishwashing liquid? If so, this is really not ideal and I would recommend against it!
As this knowledgeable poster is from across the pond my understanding is Castile Soap is the best for soft bodied bug control here in the US.> How to Make Homemade Insecticidal Soap for PlantsSwedishGhost said:Dishwashing liquid contains quite strong detergents since its aim is to clean dishes, not aphids. Ideally what you're looking for are potassium salts of long-chained fatty acids, insecticidal soaps. The phytotoxicity is quite correlated with length of the chains themselves (a bit like how it works for horticultural oil, i.e. summer and winter oils) and you're looking for >10 carbon atoms or so. Dishwashing soap will not fit here and might not even contain classical "soaps", i.e. fatty acid salts; The components might be even more toxic than small-chained fatty acid soaps.
Habanebro said:Hello, would you please help identify these bugs? Some are bigger and browner. They coat my leaves with a shiny liquid. And I guess they eat the leaves.
Thank you!