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Yeah, I didn't use soap because after looking more closely and with the help of the lovely people here in the forum, I realized that together with the aphids I had hoverfly larvae, ladybirds and parasitic wasps, that, eventually, ate the aphids! My guess is that using soap might disturb the hoverfly larvae. So have a close look to see if any beneficial insects are around that could have the aphids for dinner!
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The oil based aphid controls usually say don't use on plants that are in flower. I'm not sure how these work but the oil probably coats the aphid preventing it from breathing through its skin. Aphids are not unique and other insects are likely to be killed as well. Bees breathe through small holes in the skin called spiracles and these could be blocked by oil.
I would wait until the flowers have finished, but be aware that you will also probably kill beneficial predators as well as the aphids even after flowering.A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy
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Originally posted by Ryez View PostYeah, I didn't use soap because after looking more closely and with the help of the lovely people here in the forum, I realized that together with the aphids I had hoverfly larvae, ladybirds and parasitic wasps, that, eventually, ate the aphids! My guess is that using soap might disturb the hoverfly larvae. So have a close look to see if any beneficial insects are around that could have the aphids for dinner!
Indoor plants just get an occasional visual check and gentle squishing of any aphids on the leaves. Greenhouse plant aphids generally now dealt with as food for hoverflies, ladybirds etc
Poached egg plants, marigolds etc grown as companion plants.
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Originally posted by Jay22 View PostJust reading this thread...can these oil/soap mixtures be used while plant has blossom...don't want to harm the bees!
Just noticed I have aphids on my two small pear trees!
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Originally posted by gardengeordie View Postwill they normally just go for the pepper plants that's all I can see them on
I don’t wash plants with soapy water as it can kill the plant (it’s not dishwash liquid you should be using anyway, it’s horticultural soft soap), I just carefully wipe the leaves* while pouring water over my fingers, squishing the boogers. Repeat daily.
* wear reading specs, the aphids look enormousAll gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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Encourage predators by making winter homes for them. Bite the bullet, don't spray, squish as TS says, and wait for predators to arrive, thy won't be long, but if you spray, you will kill them all. The first year maybe you'll have quite a bit of damage, but the years after, the predators will already be at home in your garden and will appear soon after the pests and wipe them out in a few days. (Remember, you won't get predators until you get pests, it's their prey that attracts them)
I grow runner beans and they get aphids every year, but within a week even with a detailed search, there's not one left. just lots of ladybirds, aphid lions, hoverflies, and (I'm a bit ambivalent about this one) earwigs.Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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I’m starting to get hoverflies into the polytunnel at last. There are definitely less than last year but I am hoping the better weather will fix that. Previous years I’ve had a natural population of aphidius in polytunnel and outside as I noticed some aphids transformed into golden blobs. I hoping they come back this year as a couple of strawberry plants in greenhouse had greenfly on new buds. I squished them but I know they’ll be back. Then again, so will I!
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