Cayennemist said:
Make a bucket and try it on a small normal grow and test it and stop trolling my posts. I have seen it work on mites and aphids if applied weekly 3-4 times. You post lots of anti AACT bs and yet is is always about large comercial grows and without telling us how or what you put in it. I know AACT is not a cure all but it is the closest thing to one that I have seen.
I now this because of 3 years straight using it and watching infested "bonnie" plants turn in to healthy picture perfect plants.
So again
I don't want to here any doubters unless they have tried it! on hobby sized grows
miguelovic why don't you try it on a smaller more controllable scale and stop trolling my posts. I have seen nothing indicating you have done it other than your "word"
So once again
Cayennemist said:
miguelovic said:Ah damn didn't even see that post. Now there's something with meat on it, though their methods seem a little rudimentary, it does provide strong support for control with AACT, specifically vermicompost tea (more chitin/chitinase?).
moosery said:Tea for broad mites? I guess if the tea is at 43-49C and you dunk the whole plant in it for 15 minutes, then sure it'd work!
I say stick to the known/proven methods if you want to keep any sort of crop at all, as I said, messing about with experimentation concerning broad mites is not recommended..
And the world is flat so don't go to far out or you'll fall of the edge."I say stick to the known/proven methods if you want to keep any sort of crop at all"
Cayennemist said:
What have you got to loose?
Hot Head said:my plants are OUTSIDE!!!!!
a dunk is out of the question....cant I use a blowdryer?..lol
moosery said:
Your entire crop. Within a week. Have you ever had broad mite? I have.
I'm not knocking it, I'm all for experimentation, but OP (well, the recent OP anyway!) needs to make an informed decision on how to save his plants.
doh. Well, I guess I'm the wrong person to ask about that, here in the UK, broad mite doesn't really cope well outside so far as I know..I dumped some infected plants outside last year and within a couple days the broad mite were gone, but then so were the leaves, thanks to slugs.
Best guess outside would be try soap spray first, or neem oil. Oh, another thing you can do to reduce the numbers is get a REALLY strong water jet and blast them off. It won't get them all but it will surely help. Dont blast the leaves off though, lol.
Found the other post:
http://thehotpepper.com/topic/45676-leaf-issue/?hl=%2Bbroad+%2Bmites#entry961329
The only person that put effort in debunking my claim even admitted it has potential. you on the other hand moosery just blew it of because you "know what you are talking about." Please research a little before just dismiss someones advise.miguelovic, on 01 Jun 2014 - 2:59 PM, said:
Cayennemist said:
Ah damn didn't even see that post. Now there's something with meat on it, though their methods seem a little rudimentary, it does provide strong support for control with AACT, specifically vermicompost tea (more chitin/chitinase?).
alkhall said:I have three plants with these symptoms, curiously, all are Bhuts.
Since they are outside, the 'dip' method is not an option, so out came the scissors.
As it is early in the season, and none of the plats are producing flowers, let alone pods, what are my options for chemical insecticide? Will Sevin work, or is there another?
moosery said:I'd personally probably go with soap spray, and cross my fingers, but whatever you do, be very methodical. I think that's the key, rather than which substance.
Well no - I lie. If I only had three affected plants, I'd cut them down to save the rest. That's an option but do check the other plants carefully first! They spread very readily due to them being very territorial, they will carry their mate a fair distance onto new foliage...
Worth mentioning that you should always get a sighting of a mite with a loupe before jumping to conclusions, a few things cause similar symptoms, but unless you can see the white specks running around (they move fairly fast for their size) then you wont know for sure.
solid7 said:If you are planted in a peat based substrate, you might want to try what Smokemaster calls "Witches Brew". (calcium/magnesium acetate) It is created by neutralizing dolomitic lime in white vinegar. If you are planted in a coco based substrate, you may try calcium acetate. I use ground eggshells with white vinegar for this. (addition of calcium to coco coir is mandatory for proper growth) With either of those concoctions, you'll use about 2 Tbsp per gallon. (roughly 30g per 4L)
Will do.Brocoli said:If you want to know if its mites for sure, get a 80x mag (atleast) and take a look.
Nasty buggers.
There really is no recipe for making the stuff. You basically just put eggshells into a coffee grinder - or use a mortar and pestle - and put the result into white vinegar. Basically, until it stops bubbling. When it's done, you can PH test a sample, and it should be somewhere near neutral. If you still have acidic tendencies, add more eggshells.I'm familiar with Smoke's Witches Brew, http://c2cpeppers.proboards.com/thread/3000/smokemasters-witches-brew, but not the other, got a recipe?