I MUST OF OVER WATERED ANY NATURAL WAYS OR SAFE WAYS TO GET RID OF HELP!!!!!
Printable View
I MUST OF OVER WATERED ANY NATURAL WAYS OR SAFE WAYS TO GET RID OF HELP!!!!!
I found a few tidbits on the interwebs...First is putting a thin layer of sand over the top of your potting soil which inhibits the gnats from reaching the soil, but still allows water to hit your soil. The second is taking about a cup of water and adding a few drops of dish soap...make sure you use something like palmolive which is biodegradable...then agitate slightly to sud and pour on your soil which should kill the gnats...
Mind that these are remedies I found on the internet and havn't actually tried them myself but the sand at least seems safe and fairly inexpensive :)
I once thought along the same lines with the sand treatment, but from what I've heard recently, it's not all that reliable. I don't think it will hurt, and you will end up having light reflect off of it, but you'll eventually end up with a sandy mess for a top dressing.
Maybe think about picking up a few of those non-toxic pest strips, and hang them somewhere above the affected pots. If you can keep them near a light, the adults will gravitate right to them. Just be careful that any fans you may have don't blow them into any foliage, or you'll end up tearing the leaves to get them off. For the larvae, best method to kill them is obviously to be careful about not overwatering. Also, make sure that even after a light watering, there is no standing water in the trays beneath the pots. Take away their moisture, and watch their numbers decline!
Take care. :jointsmile:
I buy pyrethrin concentrate at my local grow shop. Add 30ml (2 tbsp) per gallon and give them a thorough watering. It will kill your gnats and has no adverse effects. If you're dealing with fungus gnats apply once a week for 4 weeks as you have eggs and larvae in your medium and they have about a 30 day life cycle.
I've found unidentified critters on occasion and one application did away with them.
It takes a fairly high population of fungus gnats to affect your plants. I've kept them in check by spraying the adults daily, but if you have more than 2 weeks left I'd go with my first suggestion.
Whatever the reason for using dishsoap, as a surfactant (works great) or as indicated above, (which I've never tried personally...only bugs I get are flies) be sure that it is not antibacterial. If it is an antibacterial soap, it will kill the bioactivity in your soil. Also, I could be wrong, but I believe some dishsoaps can be an unwanted source of various phosphates, so easy does it. :thumbsup:
stick a 'Hot Shot No-Pest Strip' in there ... been using them for years, never had a bug problem :thumbsup: yes, they are safe to use :jointsmile:
My last two bags of Moisture Control MG had gnats eggs in the potting soil. ( it's suppose to be near sterile....:wtf: )
anyways, I don't do anything about them, they don't seem to effect my plants?...and I enjoy trying to catch them...mono a mono...:stoned:
yeah, gnats are cheap entertainment :thumbsup:- just slow enough for me to catch, but fast enough to provide some sport ... (my fly-catchin days are behind me :() ...Quote:
Originally Posted by Dutch Pimp
I'm glad you said that....:thumbsup:Quote:
Originally Posted by the image reaper
I was beginning to think it was some sort of psycho thing...:lol5:...with me?
Ok know, I know where the buggers are coming from Miracle Grow.Quote:
Originally Posted by Dutch Pimp
my bags of Miracle Grow Organic Choice also has gnats. grrrrrrrrrr