I heard a discussion on the radio a few days ago and promptly forgot it after arriving at my destination. But I remembered it this morning and got to wondering if anyone here has tried this and what the experience was. The premise is that bugs in your area have plants that they are attracted to and plants that they intentionally stay away from. Often, the plants they stay away from are considered to be weeds, while they're very attracted to your garden. So take some of this weed, make a tea of it, then spray down your garden plants with the tea.
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I am thinking the possibility exists that they'd be going after some of the weeds if your garden didn't exist, that they're just less attracted in some cases than in others. But the possibility also exists that they are actually repelled by some of the weeds.Â
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I am aware of the theory that you should just plant bug-resistant plants near your desirable plants (a.k.a. "companion planting"), but that's not what I am asking about here. What if, instead of planting, say marigolds, you just made marigold tea and sprayed your desirable plants with them? I am not fond of marigolds at all, and had no luck when I attempted companion planting with them a number of years ago, so planting them is not an option I would even consider at this point. But I would consider buying some marigold plants just to make tea with, as an example.Â
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I am thinking the possibility exists that they'd be going after some of the weeds if your garden didn't exist, that they're just less attracted in some cases than in others. But the possibility also exists that they are actually repelled by some of the weeds.Â
Â
I am aware of the theory that you should just plant bug-resistant plants near your desirable plants (a.k.a. "companion planting"), but that's not what I am asking about here. What if, instead of planting, say marigolds, you just made marigold tea and sprayed your desirable plants with them? I am not fond of marigolds at all, and had no luck when I attempted companion planting with them a number of years ago, so planting them is not an option I would even consider at this point. But I would consider buying some marigold plants just to make tea with, as an example.Â