Tips and Tricks for Preventing Squash Bugs
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Safer has an excellent "Insecticidal Soap" product.
i use a combination of Murphy's oil soap and dish detergent that proves effective but the board technique was new to me.
This sounds fantastic. What is the ratio you use?? I have lost 3 of my 7 plants to the hugs this year.
I think you meant DE. Diatomaceous Earth. It's a natural silica the will shred internal organs of small pests. Be careful of your worm population also.
I am surprised and frankly dismayed that Sevin or such heavy duty chemical pesticide was suggested as a control for squash bugs in an otherwise very informative article. I would suggest there are other more natural sprays that an organic grower (backyard gardeners too) can use to effectively deal with squash bugs. (Garlic sprays and also Dr. Bronner's Peppermint & Hemp Castile Soap - for a couple controls - are what we use on our small farm in Nevad, when all else seems to fail. Thanks for listening; Virginia, at Custom Gardens Organic Farm.
Seven didn't work for me anyway. I haven't been able to grow pumpkins for three years now. The Squash Bugs allow my plants to grown fairly large, giving me a false hope that the plants will survive, but then decimate my plants. This year I was desperate and poured two whole bottles of Seven on the plants after the Squash bugs took over. I intended to destroy the plants with Seven on them but was hoping to get rid of the bugs once and for all. It didn't work at all. I lost my entire crop of pumpkins, squash, zucchini again this year. Bastards.
I plant radishes in succession every two weeks amongst my squash plants throughout the season and the squash bugs stay away. I started this after a couple of seasons of crazy invasions. If I only plant them once, it doesn't help. As soon as the radishes start to mature, the bugs are back. I discovered this by accident and went back to my garden diary to make sure nothing else had changed, but this was it. For me, it is a surefire squash bug repellent, though, I have to say it makes no sense to me either.
You didn’t mention it, but squash bugs love tomatoes as well. They are always on my tomatoes, eating the surface, although that may not be what initially drew them to my garden.
I have a huge infestation on my squash, but have never found any on my tomatoes. I have, however, noticed a lot of stink bugs. They have a similar look but are bigger. Are you sure you don't have stink bugs on your tomatoes?
For 3 years now, after planting at the beginning of May I religiously go out and pick squash bugs off all my vining plants; Squash, butternut squash, cantaloupe, cucumbers, pumpkins, zucchini, and even pole beans, this morning I even found them on my bell peppers, and I drop them in a soapy solution. I have filled two, gallon sized, bottles with these bugs and their carcasses and still they are everywhere. I have companion planted, sprayed Neem oil, sprayed organic soap, scraped off eggs and they are still everywhere. Right now my routine is to gently spray down the plants, to get the bugs to come to the tops of the leafs and then hand pick them. Then I go back and check for eggs and once ever couple of days spray a soapy solution and/or neem oil on the vines and leafs. I have even used sevin in a pinch.
In the garden I do not use mulch and have placed stone around the raised beds. In the winter I do a complete clean out and burn the vines giving them no place to bed over the winter. This year is the first year I have been able to keep the majority of my vining plants alive, although all the zucchini plant succumb to them.
Help me! PLEASE
In the article you state there is only one generation per/year, what do you mean by that?
How can I finally rid myself of these things?