I am over run with white flies in my garden. They have left little white eggs/ don't know all over the back of the leaves. I have applied Sevin but no help. It seems to be snowing when I grab a tomatoe.
Does anyone have any suggestions out there?
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
Haven't had that problem, but what I have seen mentioned is soapy water spray (be sure it is soap, not detergent, that can harm or even kill your plants), garlic oil spray, Neem oil, vacuuming them off your plants, and worm castings placed on the ground around the plant. You can also just squish them. There are parasitic wasps that attack them and they are preyed on by lacewings and ladybugs.
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- Full Member
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- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 10:06 pm
- Location: Santa Clara County, California (USDA Zone 9b)
Hi there,
I have some white flies and some aphids, so I bought 1500 ladybugs ($7.99 impulse-buy bugs on the counter as I exited my local nursery) and released them yesterday evening after wetting down the ground.
This AM they had collected on many of the squash leaves with the biggest bug infestations, so I'm hopeful they are going to do the same with the tomato plants as soon as they figure out where the real bug supply is located.
I'll try to remember to report back on how the experiment goes.
I have some white flies and some aphids, so I bought 1500 ladybugs ($7.99 impulse-buy bugs on the counter as I exited my local nursery) and released them yesterday evening after wetting down the ground.
This AM they had collected on many of the squash leaves with the biggest bug infestations, so I'm hopeful they are going to do the same with the tomato plants as soon as they figure out where the real bug supply is located.
I'll try to remember to report back on how the experiment goes.
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- Full Member
- Posts: 11
- Joined: Fri Jul 17, 2009 10:06 pm
- Location: Santa Clara County, California (USDA Zone 9b)
End result: Most of 'em had flown away in a couple of days. A few remain. The aphid population is mainly reduced although a few plants seem to have been missed. Overall, I can't complain -- much better than before.techlawgardener wrote:
I'll try to remember to report back on how the experiment goes.