It seems ironic to post this on a hot pepper forum - I guess I just would assume that everyone here would have tried it, but I haven't seen a topic on it yet.
Back when I was growing orchids for a company, I had an issue with mealy bugs. Heinous little bastards, they get way way waaaaay down into the cracks of a Phalaenopsis (or Dendrobium, or Catalea, etc) and spread like wildfire. They're really tough to irradicate, and they gestate pretty quickly. a major challenge with this plant is that it's a monopod (1-footed) and if you get water down into the crown, it can rot - and that's it for that plant. It'll never grow a new crown leaf. Many pesticides are microencapsulated in a water-based solution, making it risky to spray down into the crown of a Phalaenopsis.
A vendor came in touting the miracles of capsaisin-based pesticide, and I figured I'd give it a go. I always appreciate nontoxic solutions, and there's nothing in the pepper-based pesticide that's harmful in any way.
The company advertised that you could drink the stuff (though it smelled pretty funky, so I would not recommend this).
Speaking only from my experience treating mealybugs on Phalaenopsis, the results were excellent - the stuff was encapsulated in a waxy mix, and not only eliminated the bugs, but left a glossy residue on the plants leaves, which was pretty pleasing to look at. The plants looked great - if I recall correctly the spray also very lightly fertilized the plants too. Plus with the residue, as soon as the babies hatched they were instantly nuked.
what I used was similar to this:
http://www.agricultu...ide-Gallon.html
but that's not the exact product - the one I used had a really colorful label (hey, it was 15 years ago...my memory is like a golden retriever these days...)
I've heard it's not great for aphids, but for soft-bodied pests it was pretty darn effective.
Anyone here have other experiences with this? I'm curious about treating whitefly, worms, etc. when fruiting my cherry tree gets caterpillars, earwigs and thrips - I think it'd probably work for the thrips, but not sure about the rest. Would love to hear other folks' experiences.
Back when I was growing orchids for a company, I had an issue with mealy bugs. Heinous little bastards, they get way way waaaaay down into the cracks of a Phalaenopsis (or Dendrobium, or Catalea, etc) and spread like wildfire. They're really tough to irradicate, and they gestate pretty quickly. a major challenge with this plant is that it's a monopod (1-footed) and if you get water down into the crown, it can rot - and that's it for that plant. It'll never grow a new crown leaf. Many pesticides are microencapsulated in a water-based solution, making it risky to spray down into the crown of a Phalaenopsis.
A vendor came in touting the miracles of capsaisin-based pesticide, and I figured I'd give it a go. I always appreciate nontoxic solutions, and there's nothing in the pepper-based pesticide that's harmful in any way.
The company advertised that you could drink the stuff (though it smelled pretty funky, so I would not recommend this).
Speaking only from my experience treating mealybugs on Phalaenopsis, the results were excellent - the stuff was encapsulated in a waxy mix, and not only eliminated the bugs, but left a glossy residue on the plants leaves, which was pretty pleasing to look at. The plants looked great - if I recall correctly the spray also very lightly fertilized the plants too. Plus with the residue, as soon as the babies hatched they were instantly nuked.
what I used was similar to this:
http://www.agricultu...ide-Gallon.html
but that's not the exact product - the one I used had a really colorful label (hey, it was 15 years ago...my memory is like a golden retriever these days...)
I've heard it's not great for aphids, but for soft-bodied pests it was pretty darn effective.
Anyone here have other experiences with this? I'm curious about treating whitefly, worms, etc. when fruiting my cherry tree gets caterpillars, earwigs and thrips - I think it'd probably work for the thrips, but not sure about the rest. Would love to hear other folks' experiences.