This lady is almost done but she’s developed tiny white spots on her leaves and black little dots/specs on the leaves undercarriage. Can I save her without neem oil flavored buds?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Spots and dots oh my!
Collapse
X
-
- Likes 2
-
I am so very, terribly sorry. Terribly.
I learned my lesson about thrips from Toker1. The damage looks similar but thrips don't do webs.
...am so sorry
-
Ouch! That is heartbreaking! I have no idea how well any of these ideas work but i know ladybugs are good for most pests. I found this link for you and maybe someone with more experience with spider mites can either verify or refute any of these methods. https://herbanplanet.com/marijuana-b...flowering.html
EDIT: It seems as if it may be too late for any of these to work. Sorry
Comment
-
You can spray the leaves but avoid the buds. I would try an organic insect soap on the leaves and near the surrounding ground.4x4 600w HID empty for summer
3x3 400w HID with Bruce Banner and Skywalker Kush
2x2 65w Quantum Board LED with 4 mother strains
running all simultaneously for a perpetual harvests.
https://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum...hash-adventure
Comment
-
Look into PureCrop1. Can’t say it’s been working for me, but I have a strange bug. Supposedly nukes spidermites, and is totally safe up through and after harvest.Gorilla 3x3
LEC 315
Kind Soil
Current: White Widow XXL, Crystal M.E.T.H., Six-Shooter, Afghan Kush Ryder, Northern Lights x2, Strawberry Cheesecake
Comment
-
Some of you might have read my little experiment using a mild H2O2 solution on my flowers. So, I'm copying and pasting this from another website. This is not a website about cannabis. Just one about treating bugs, specifically spidermites.
Pour 8 ounces of 3-percent hydrogen peroxide in 1 gallon of water, and add 8 ounces blackstrap molasses or white sugar. Stir the solution and pour it into a spray bottle. Then, spray the plant with the mixture, fully soaking the surface underneath the leaves, the soil and the crown of the plant. Alternatively, use undiluted 3-percent hydrogen peroxide, although you might find that the molasses or sugar helps the mixture stick to the plant better. Spray the plant daily for one week.C'mon, mule!
Coco/perlite
3x3x6
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment