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There is no magic bullet for keeping your garden and indoor plants free from insect pests. Some tricks I have learned over the years provide ways to cope with bugs without resorting to nasty chemicals. Here are my tips for pest control, including homemade insecticidal sprays (soap sprays) and organic pesticides.
Pest Control Starts With You
Before resorting to using pesticides (even organic ones), consider the following techniques to discourage insect pests from attacking your plants:
Nourish your plants with organic amendments such as aged compost. Strong plants don鈥檛 attract as many insects and can withstand their assault better than weak ones. If you鈥檙e using fertilizer, follow instructions closely. Over-fertilized plants will attract pests to eat their lush new growth.
Use barriers like row covers to block pests from attacking your plants, especially tender transplants. (Remove the covers when plants are established and in bloom to allow for insect pollination.) Additionally, 鈥渃ollars鈥 (paper towels or toilet paper cardboard rolls) inserted around the small transplants (1 to 2 inches into the soil) will prevent insects such as cutworms from eating the young stems.
Time plantings to avoid peak insect populations. For example, plant squash as early as possible to avoid squash vine borers, which lay eggs in early to mid-summer. Plant carrots after June 1 and harvest by early September to avoid the carrot fly.
Select varieties that are naturally resistant to some pests. I grow a lot of butternut squash because it is highly resistant to attack from the squash vine borer.
Make your garden welcoming to beneficial insects, and they will do a lot of the work for you by keeping the bugs they feed on in check. For example, lady beetles are an effective biological control of many insect pests. If you see a tomato hornworm with white cocoons on his back (above photo), leave him alone. A parasitic wasp has laid her eggs on him, and soon, her babies will eat him from the inside out. A fitting death for such a gruesome pest!
Learn to identify the bugs in your garden. You can鈥檛 beat them if you don鈥檛 know who is a friend and who is a foe. Learn what their larvae and eggs look like to head them off before they become adults.
5 Organic Pesticide Sprays for Insects
If you have exhausted all these methods and feel you must use a spray, don鈥檛 reach for harsh chemicals. They will do more harm than good by polluting the watershed, killing good and bad bugs alike, and eventually, the insects you are trying to kill may grow resistant to those chemicals, requiring you to use even stronger ones! They can also harm birds, animals, you, and your children!
Try a more natural approach by making one of these homemade insecticidal sprays. Remember that although they are less toxic, they are not totally harmless. Keep them away from kids and pets. Test them on a few leaves before you go all in to ensure they won鈥檛 injure your plants. Be sure never to spray them on your plants during the sunny, hot part of the day, or they will definitely cause foliar damage. Spray in the evening when bees and other pollinators are not active.
1. Dish Soap Spray
Dissolve 1 tablespoon of mild liquid soap, such as pure dish soap (no bleach, degreaser, or detergents added) or castile soap, in 1 quart of water. Dr. Bronner鈥檚 soap may be expensive, but it uses no animal fats, which makes it a good choice for vegans. Insecticidal soaps are good for killing soft-bodied insects. Be sure to cover the whole plant鈥攂oth sides of the leaves and on the stems. Soap sprays only work when wet, so they will need to be reapplied every 4-7 days or until you notice that populations have decreased. After a few applications, if rain hasn鈥檛 done this for you, spray the plants with plain water to rinse off any soapy residue.
2. Oil Spray
Mix 1 cup of vegetable oil with 1 tablespoon of mild liquid soap. Add 2-8 teaspoons of this mixture to 1 quart of water and spray your plants as above. The oil in this spray smothers the insects, so it is effective on aphids, thrips, mites, and scale.
3. Tomato Leaves Insecticide
The leaves of tomatoes contain solanine and tomatine and can be used as an insecticide. Soak 2 cups of fresh leaves in 1 quart of water overnight. Strain and spray. It kills aphids and many types of chewing insects but also attracts beneficials. Don鈥檛 use it on other nightshades like eggplants, peppers, or potatoes because it could spread disease from plant to plant.
4. Garlic Repellent Spray
Despite all you鈥檝e read, garlic is more of a repellent than a killer. Puree 2 bulbs of garlic with 1 cup of water and let sit overnight. Strain the liquid into a quart jar, add 1/2 cup vegetable oil and 1 teaspoon liquid soap, and fill the jar the rest of the way with water. Put one cup in a 1-quart sprayer, fill it with water, and apply it to your affected plants. It is good for repelling aphids, cabbage worms, leafhoppers, squash bugs, and whiteflies.
5. Hot Pepper Repellent Spray
Hot pepper is also a good repellent and works on rabbits and deer, as well as many insects. Mix 1 tablespoon dried chile powder, 1 quart of water, and 1 teaspoon of mild soap. Spray full strength on the plants under attack.
If you have lots of hot peppers growing in your garden, you can make a fresh concoction from 1/2 cup of chopped peppers pureed in 1 cup of water. Add the puree to 1 quart of water and bring to a boil. Let sit until cool, and then strain. Add 1 teaspoon mild soap and spray full strength on plants. You might want to wear gloves when working with this spray, so be sure not to get it into your eyes!
Many other plants have been reported to have insecticidal qualities, including hyssop, lettuce leaves, onions, pennyroyal, peppermint, and radish leaves.
There is no one-size-fits-all approach to pest management. At best, we can try to maintain a healthy balance of good guys and bad guys and still get some decent produce!
Now that we鈥檝e learned how to minimize insect pests鈥 let鈥檚 tackle weeds. Here are tips on coping with weeds, including 5 Homemade Herbicides.
Insecticidal soaps are a valuable tool, especially for soft-bodied pests (aphids and such). However, you want to apply in the morning or early evening, not hot sunny afternoons. Avoid spraying when temperatures are high. See more: http://www.ladybug.uconn.edu/FactSheets/insecticidal-soaps.php
You just run a whole section on pests, disease and other garden troubles. I thought I saved it in archives, but not I can't find it. The japanese beetles that destroy my plum trees and rose of sharon bushes ARE BACK again. How id you sat to get rid of the darned beetles ?
Thanks, Elaine M Barnes