Tips and Tricks for Preventing Squash Bugs
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Forgot to mention I'm from Green Bay WI...
Are you positive it’s a squash bug? Some house pests such as the Western Conifer Seed Bug resemble squash bugs.
Either way, it’s important to look around your home for any tiny gaps around pipes, pipes and electrical lines, vents, overhangs, and foundation. Where are they coming from? Then seal or caulk all those gaps.
In the fall, spray the exterior of your home with an approved insecticide. Speak to your state’s local cooperative extension to see what’s approved. You might need to consult with a professional pest control.
If they’re in your home, vacuum up the bugs or spray them with a dish soap/water solution and sweep them up.
We have the same problem here in south central New York. They are trying to find a way into the house to hibernate for the winter. They are very annoying.
Stink bugs, a relative of Squash bugs, are invading the Chicago area. I had hundreds infest a bedroom last year through a loose screen. I vacuumed them (it may make your vacuum smell til you change the bag). I had them in the bedding, behind pictures, in drawers, in photo albums!!! They don't destroy anything but are a definite nuisance. They do not breed over the winter in your house. Some say using soapy water in spray bottle around your windows works.
I have tried EVERY remedy imaginable for killing or repelling (adult) squash bugs, and NONE of them has ever worked. I am convinced that all of the home remedies out there are a waste of time.
Immature squash bugs are easy to kill, but the adult bugs (which are the ones that show up first), are a different story.
Checking each vine daily, and physically removing (and smashing) the bugs and eggs by hand (or duct tape) DOES help, but you never find them all, and this becomes very time-consuming as the plants get larger. And if you ever have to skip checking for a day or two, you are likely to find your plants dead when you return. Picking the bugs off by hand has never been a good solution for me.
Having said that, I HAVE found a way to get plenty of squash. The ONLY thing that has worked for me is to plant 2 or 3 times more squash plants than I really want. Yes, the squash bugs WILL still eventually kill them all, but not all at once. So, if you plant extra plants, AND check for bugs as often as you can, you can probably get all of the squash that you want. For me, that means planting 15 plants or so, instead of the 5 or 6 plants that I REALLY want.
To save space (since I don’t really WANT to plan 15 squash plants!), I plant them between my sweet corn rows, and the squash plants seem to like that just fine. I think they actually do a little better there, than in the full Kansas sun.
For those that are interested, here are the many failed squash bug remedies that I have tried over the years.
• I have tried spraying the plants regularly with Sevin (and every other pesticide).
Sevin and other over-the-counter pesticides are totally ineffective against the adult squash bug. But I still tried. I used liquid spray on top AND undersides of leaves, and generously on the main stalk. I used Sevin dust to cover the ground around the plants. And I have sprayed the bugs directly. Nothing would kill the adult bugs.
• I have tried spraying the bugs with a mixture of dish soap and water.
This did not bother the bugs at all.
• I have tried placing boards around the base of the plants, as I have read that the bugs will hide there, making them easier to find and kill.
I have seen many online sources suggest this, but I have found it to be totally ineffective. A healthy squash plant will get fairly large, and their long vines and large leaves make it very easy for the bugs to hide. I have seen the bugs circle around a stalk to hide as I look around the plant. With mulch around the plants, the bugs can pretty much hide anywhere, and usually NOT under the boards. I even tried NOT using mulch, but that did not help.
• I have heard from MANY sources that marigolds will repel squash bugs.
As far as I can tell, squash bugs are completely unfazed by marigolds. I planted marigolds around the outside of my entire garden, and planted them all around and amongst the squash plants. TOTALLY INEFFECTIVE. I will say that there are many varieties of marigolds, and I have not tried them all. I think this remedy is a waste of your time, unless someone can tell you exactly which type of marigold repels squash bugs (and even then, I would be skeptical). I still have marigolds in my garden just because my family likes them.
• I've been told that using cedar wood chips as a mulch around the plant will repel squash bugs and keep them away.
This was also totally ineffective.
• I have tried tying the squash vines to a wire fence (to get the leaves and vines off of the ground).
Unlike cucumbers and other vining plants, the squash vines are just too heavy and cumbersome for this to work well. I'm not sure it would help even if I COULD get the plants to grow on a fence, or that it would be good for the plant.
• I have tried forcing the plants to grow inside a tomato cage, again to try and keep the leaves and vines off of the ground.
This did make it a little easier for me to find/see the bugs, but I'm not sure it was really healthy for the plant, and I still lost most of my plants before they produced a single squash. I have to declare this solution a total failure as well.
• I have tried crop rotation--planting the squash in a different location in the garden each year.
Totally ineffective against squash bugs (although still a good idea, in general).
• I have tried skipping growing squash for a year.
Squash bugs reappeared as soon as I started planting squash again.
• I have tried REDUCING the number of plants to just a few, so that I could more easily manage checking for bugs on a daily basis.
I just could not catch enough of them soon enough to prevent damage and death of the plants. I sometimes could not check every single day.
• I always remove and burn the dead squash plants immediately when they die.
Still a good idea, even though it has never helped my squash bug problem.
Vance,
I am so glad someone said this - these home remedies make people feel good and are repeated endlessly on forums, but unless you have just one or two sickly squash plants, the idea of picking off eggs and adults is absolutely ludicrous. A single healthy squash plant will spread for 6 or 8 feet and have hundreds of leaves. I can find eggs anywhere I look. It would take hours to go over all the leaves and the adults would probably lay them faster than I could find them all. And I have not seen a single adult yet - they hide very well. I started using Ortho Max L&G Insect Killer with bifenthrin a couple of years ago and it is the solution for me (new product seems to be BubBGone Insect Killer). Sevin sounds good but does not work. I hate using chemicals in the garden but I am tired of growing winter squash and having it all eaten up by squash bugs, and the plants get sicker and sicker by late summer if not treated. I have grown more and more as you suggest, but I get few good squash by late Fall and hundreds of pounds of damaged ones. I feel spraying early in the season will kill squash bugs and borers and leave little residue by Fall when I harvest.
My two cents!
I've found an effective solution for killing the squash bugs. Doctor Bronner's eucalyptus soap. You have to be careful about the dilution. You don't want it too stringent or you will damage the plant. When you see bugs, spray the solution on them. They will be dead in 30 seconds, trust me. Just die on the spot, especially the smaller ones. (If you can see the big ones, squash them by hand.) In order to be careful about the plants, I water the leaves I've sprayed after the bugs are dead in order to get the solution off the leaves.
If you've got a big infestation, you'll have to do this regularly. But it kills them dead, as the Raid can says.
For Tom Denton, Does it have to be eucalyptus because I I think I have this brand in peppermint.
What is the dilution of that Dr Bronners soap that you use to battle the squash bugs?
This sounds great! I ordered some soap from amazon. What is the dilution ratio u use?