Hi all,
A friend of mine that is a naturopath told me that a good pest repelent you can easily make yourself is garlic and chilli.
Basically she said to finely chop the garlic and chilli and put it in a pot of water on the stove and boil it for a while and then cool it down and strain it enough to use in a spray bottle. So far it seems ok. I ran out a little while ago and now some of my chinese elms have lost foilage to snails or something. Im not too sure as I didnt catch them in the act.
Does anyone else have any experience using this method or any input or advice.
Thanks and enjoy the rest of the weekend.
Greg
Natural pest repelent
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Re: Natural pest repelent
Hasnt anyone heard of this metbod for their bonsai? Hope im not wasting my time doing it.
Greg
Greg
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Re: Natural pest repelent
Hi Greg,
There have been many stories concerning using these (and other) ingredients to deter pests in the garden e.g. https://www.abc.net.au/gardening/factsh ... es/9430018
There have been many stories concerning using these (and other) ingredients to deter pests in the garden e.g. https://www.abc.net.au/gardening/factsh ... es/9430018
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Re: Natural pest repelent
G'day Terry thanks very much for the reply and link.
Today I found 3 of my smaller Chinese Elms with half the foilage gone and a few inches away way a fat snail. Very frustrating.
Greg
Today I found 3 of my smaller Chinese Elms with half the foilage gone and a few inches away way a fat snail. Very frustrating.
Greg
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Re: Natural pest repelent
I’ve heard this chilli and garlic thing several times before but to be honest I don’t know of anyone whose had sustained success with it. I assume it needs to be reapplied regularly (like after every watering) to maintain effectiveness and I guess that gets a bit hard after a while. I’m all for natural so I hope to be corrected by somebody... or maybe another alternative that is more effective?!?
In the end you gotta have something that works!
In the end you gotta have something that works!
"NO CUTS, NO GLORY"
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Re: Natural pest repelent
Clearly you don't have vampires in your neck of the woods. Just sayin'
(Just thought I'd quickly edit this entry... in taking the p!ss out of warding off vampires ... I was making no comment on the effectiveness of organic/natural pest potions. When I used to grow veggies I tried a few home-made natural repellants to varying degrees of success. These days my main go to sprays are store bought Pest Oil and Nature Soap ...despite their brand names, I am not sure how natural they are.)
Now.. back to vampires ... and you thought stakes were for lemon trees....
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Re: Natural pest repelent
Not for a bit MJL... Hallowe’en was last month!
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Re: Natural pest repelent
I suspect you are correct Ryceman3, reapplication would probably be necessary after rain (or if you water from above). Don't know how effective this would be for slugs/snails either. Interestingly, I saw a TV ad last night for a commercial product https://www.richgro.com.au/products/fru ... ect-spray/. Scroll down to the ingredients - garlic, chilli, pyrethrum! I can guess what will be doing the workRyceman3 wrote: ↑November 11th, 2019, 5:07 pm I’ve heard this chilli and garlic thing several times before but to be honest I don’t know of anyone whose had sustained success with it. I assume it needs to be reapplied regularly (like after every watering) to maintain effectiveness and I guess that gets a bit hard after a while.
Natural is a misnomer - think arsenic, nightshade, cadmium, lead. That said, I have been trying to cut my use of pesticides in the garden, particularly on things I eat. This also has the added benefits of not killing the predators that can do a great job in controlling the pests. For instance, as soon as any aphids appear these days, they pretty much get wiped out viewtopic.php?f=19&t=24820&p=249046&hil ... id#p249046. Caterpillars I just remove by hand as I'm watering, though they can be tricky to find. I have had success using bacterial sprays on tomatoes to control these and am trialing it on my natives to control webbing caterpillars.