Organic Gardening Pest

Organic Gardening Pest
organic sprays for pests in the garden (homemade )?

I agree with BobKat.
In particular the nicotine suggestion will also kill the bees that come to pollinate your plants.
And the poor bees are having a hard enough time as it is already, it would be a poor way to thank them for helping your veg and fruit produce your food.
So please,please,please do Not use cigarettes or a nicotine based spray.

Organic Gardening PestOrganic Gardening Pest
Organic Gardening Pest

Organic Gardening Pest Control—Top 5 Tips to Protect Fruits against Pests

So you have luscious fruit growing on your fruit trees and are looking forward to having a good crop. But you seem to be worried? Is it the thought of keeping Aphids, fruit flies and coddling moths at bay that is giving you sleepless nights? Sure these thoughts must be troubling you as they do every gardener, having an orchard. The surest and simplest cure for your troubles lies in organic gardening pest control, which is nothing but a bunch of healthy recipes to keep pests under control.

These organic gardening pest control solutions are easily available, extremely beneficial and easy to prepare as these employ things that we commonly use in our daily routine. Being organic in nature these are extremely beneficial for the fruit trees and can in no way harm them like the synthetic pest control remedies often tend to do.

  1. Baits and Horticultural Oil – Coddling moths are best tackled with the help of sticky traps and corrugated cardboard. If facing this problem, you can use pheromone baits. Horticultural oil can be sprayed on the leaves of fruit trees for dealing with their larvae. This also proves beneficial in dealing with thrips, which are another common pest bothering fruit trees.
  1. Organic Soap Solution – Sprayed in the evenings, this is another way to tackle the annoying thrips and spider mites that infest the fruit trees during late summer season. Apart from this one can also spay neem oil, which again works wonders.
  1. Natural Predators – Aphids are best tackled when left to the mercy of natural predators. Make sure that you have plenty of these around to help you deal with this problem. Lacewings and lady bugs are some of the good natural predators that can help fruit farmers.
  1. Borers are another variety of pests that attack fruit trees. To protect your trees from their onslaught it is advisable to cover up their trunk. However, if they have already been infected, which would be evident from tell-tale signs as wilted stems and stiff bark, inject the stems with nematodes. This helps kill the remaining larvae. It is advisable to pull off the badly affected stems.
  1. Oriental fruit moths are another nuisance that fruit growers often face. To expose their larvae and deal with them it is advisable to till the soil around the affected trees.

The best way to protect your fruit trees from pests is to do it organically. You’ll be surprised with the results.

About the Author

Clint Sidney is a gardening enthusiast and enjoys giving information about Organic Gardening Pest Control. You can learn more about gardening at GreatGardener.eHelpshome.com.

Garden pest/pathogen organic control and treatment?

What are some good organic methods for preventing or treating common garden pest/pathogen infestations such as white flies, aphids, blights etc

Please let me know which specific infection your treatment treats….. Want to be well armed going into the spring planting season.
thanks

Organic methods for aphid or soft bodied insect control that I have found.
2% soap soln.
4 tsp of liquid soap – Dr Bonner, Murphys Oil Soap, pure castile, Ivory or unscented liquid hand soap
1 qt distilled or soft tap water
Spray all surfaces of plant.
Do not spray when temps are above 80 degrees Fahrenheit! Your plants may “burn” or have a reaction to what you are using in excessive heat. Either detergents or soaps work to kill insects that have soft bodies such as aphids, young scales, whiteflies, psyllids, mealybugs, and spider mites. Detergent is just more likely to injure the plants. This is known as “phytotoxicity.”
The soap is only effective while wet. Spray in evening or when temps are cooler so drying time is longer.
Some liquid soaps will harm plant tissue just like they harm insects – by cutting the waxy coating on the organism’s skin and causing it to dry out. Commercial insecticide soaps will not do this as much. Safer makes a product safe to use on plants.
mix to produce various dilute soap sprays

http://www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/insect/05547.html

Soap faq

http://www.ipmofalaska.com/files/soap.html

http://gardening.wsu.edu/library/lpro002/lpro002.htm

Oil or soap

http://www.bachmans.com/tipsheets/Chemicals_and_Fertilizers/HortInsectSoap.cfm

Ladybirds are predatory beetles but it is really the juvenile stage that does the most pest control. An adult female Lady Beetle may consume up to 75 aphids a day while the smaller male may consume up to 40. One larva may eat up to 350 aphids during its 1 month life span.
Organic Gardener’s Handbook of Natural Insect and Disease Control
Rodale Press Inc. (Organic Gardening Magazine)

http://insects.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/mes/no…

COMMON NATURAL ENEMIES OF INSECT AND MITE PESTS IN ROSES

http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/pmg/pestnotes

http://www.augsburg.edu/home/biology/photoofmonth/ladybird.html

http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/ent/biocontrol/predators/ladybintro.html

http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/2000/2002.html

Slugs are attracted to the odors given off by the fermentation process so beer makes a good lure over short distances. Research has shown Kingsbury Malt, Michelob, and Budweiser attract slugs far better than other brands. The beer will need to be replaced at least once a week or more as it looses its potency or becomes diluted by rain. Keep the container up with a 1″ rim to keep beetles or isopods from entry & drowning in it. Beetles hunt slugs and isopods eat dead things. Boards laid near vulnerable plants will attract sheltering slugs. Lift every morning and drop slugs into really soapy water.
Earwigs are nocturnal so the most effective methods are baited traps. One earwig trap is plastic pots baited with fish oil (like tuna or sardines) on water for them to drown in. Or rolled/crumpled newspapers stuffed into small paper bags baited with wheat germ or bran will offer earwigs places to hide in the day. Collect and dispose of the bags. Old lidded candy tins with a small hole punched in the side can be baited with bran also. I empty wash and reuse these.

Remove top & bottom from tuna or cat food cans and slip one over the seedling when planted. Segments of large soda bottles also make good collars. Push it slightly into the soil. The collar will keep out cut worms.
Protect seedlings with cheesecloth or nylon tents made by draping cloth over crossed stakes every night to keep moths from laying eggs. Remove or use very shear material so plants can still photosynthesize during the day. Removal is best.

Blights are fungal so require surfaces being sprayed BEFORE the spore arrives and burrows in. Organic methods are coats applied to prevent spore penetration.
Milk diluted to 20- 30% and sprayed every 5 days for three weeks then go to another spray.

http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~Linda%20Chalker-Scott/Horticultural%20Myths_files/Myths/Milk%20and%20mildew.pdf

Oil sprays in summer weights or neem oil are very effective fungicides.
Summer oils can be combined with baking soda for basic Cornell spray. 0.5% baking soda plus 0.5% sunspray oil.
4 tsp baking soda
4 tsp oil
Bring up to 1 gallon with water.
This can be made up as 2% baking soda and 1% oil solution proved most effective to prevent powdery mildew.

http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/bakingsoda.html

Cornmeal helps to eliminate black spot spores from the soil. It eliminates the spores in the soil around plants by supporting the beneficial fungus Trichoderma spp. that eliminates other fungal pathogens. Work in corn meal at 2 pounds of cornmeal for every 100 square feet. Water well to activate. There is a cheap, nonfood grade available at some garden centers.

Vinegar spray alters the surface pH to control fungal spores

http://www.ghorganics.com/page15.html

I hope this helps but please note that not all plants tolerate the same treatment nor do all pests respond the same way so spray and watch. Not all of these treatments have been well tested in repeatable and controlled situations on more than one or two plant species if at all.
Horticultural mythbuster

http://www.puyallup.wsu.edu/~Linda%20Chalker-Scott/Horticultural%20Myths_files/index.html

Biological crop protection: 2 examples

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