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04-05-2011, 02:39 PM
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Jr. Member
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 11
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Killing the pests or my plants? Mealys and Scale
Ok, my plants (and me) have had a very stressful year. We both survived the house fire last June. Poor plants went w/o lights or care in a smoky house for almost a week before I could get them moved out. Then they lived outdoors all summer. Fall/winter they had to live in the basement of our rental in crowded conditions but at least they had light and heat. During all this Mealy bugs started showing up. I tried to deal w/them but was to busy w/the house mess to keep up, so neglect made things get worse. Now we are back in our house and I'm trying to play catch up and I see scale has joined the mealys. A few plants I've tossed, others I've trimmed back dead stuff and removed ALL flower stocks (the flowers seem to be really attracting the mealys). I've cleaned trays, clips and name tags and sprayed them w/an insecticidal soap. I can't repot right now so I resorted to dipping each plant pot and all into a bucket w/the same insecticidal soup in it, then rubbing each leaf to remove bugs. My goal was to treat plant, pot and soil, getting into cracks and crevices that spraying wouldn't reach.
I've read on these boards to use a Bayer product that has a systemic in it, so I bought a Bayer product for fruits and vegs that is a systemic and plan to water all my plants w/that next week after they've had a change to dry out some. I may resort to dipping the pots in that also.
Any other suggestions? I hope I haven't killed them all, but at this point I figured the bugs were going to anyway.
I have mostly Phals and Oncidiums, a few Paphs, Pfrags and some misc. The Phals seem to have suffered the most.
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04-05-2011, 02:54 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Zone: 5a
Location: Kansas City, MO
Age: 66
Posts: 4,773
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Hello and welcome to the OB.
Increasing your air circulation, repotting in fresh media and sterile pots will go a long way towards pest elimination. A systemic spray will also help, is your fruit and veggie spray a 3 in 1? I've used it (3 in 1) on orchids and have had no ill effects but I don't know about the other, if it is "orchid safe".
Joann
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04-05-2011, 04:45 PM
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Jr. Member
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zoi2
Hello and welcome to the OB.
Increasing your air circulation, repotting in fresh media and sterile pots will go a long way towards pest elimination. A systemic spray will also help, is your fruit and veggie spray a 3 in 1? I've used it (3 in 1) on orchids and have had no ill effects but I don't know about the other, if it is "orchid safe".
Joann
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It is not one of the Bayer 3 in 1's since they have fertilizer in them and I didn't want to overdo fertilizer while trying to eliminate bugs. It does have the same systemic chemical in it though that the 3 in 1 products do and the label states it is good for mealys and scale.
I do plan to repot, but need to do that outside and since it is still kinda winter in my part of MI, outside is not possible right now. In the mean time I am just trying to get things under control.
Wondering if I should flush the pots w/fresh water when I'm done w/ the insecticidal soap or leave it?
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04-05-2011, 06:46 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2008
Zone: 7b
Location: Memphis, TN
Posts: 1,550
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I use the Bayer and I have found no ill effects leaving a bit of it in the bottom of my s/h pots. The only ones I flush are the Paphs/Phrags because they seem to be sensitive.
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04-05-2011, 08:34 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Zone: 5a
Location: Kansas City, MO
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Interesting, I've never seen fertilizer on the label. Guess I'll have to pay more attention.
Joann
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04-05-2011, 09:58 PM
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Jr. Member
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Zoi2
Interesting, I've never seen fertilizer on the label. Guess I'll have to pay more attention.
Joann
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I just looked on Bayer's website and they do make them w/o fertilizer, but the stores here seem to only carry the ones that do. They are for roses, flowers or shrubs and all the labels say they protect from pests, disease and feed the plants.
I went to 4 different stores before I found the 1 product I got w/o fertilizer.
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04-05-2011, 10:57 PM
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Jr. Member
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 14
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During my college years I worked for a large plantscaping company that leases and maintains the beautiful display plants in upscale business offices and malls--places that are not usually friendly to pesticides of any kind. My company's secret to handling both mealy bugs and scale was a q-tip, an old toothbrush, and rubbing alcohol.
The rubbing alcohol on a q-tip kills mealy bugs on contact. To kill scale you dip the toothbrush in alcohol and rough up the scale just enough to detach it. Pay special attention to folds, crevices, and seams at leaf junctions and also pull off any dry sheathing on pseudo-bulbs to reveal hiding places. The alcohol also takes care of the more mobile juvenile form of the scale if wiped over the leaf surface with a soft cloth.
I've never had this kind of treatment damage the leaves of any of my orchids. Don't soak the orchid with alcohol and be careful on the more grassy foliage types and you should be fine. Spot testing on especially delicate or thin-leaved orchids is always a good idea.
I'd be curious to know if others have had similar success using nothing more than rubbing alcohol.
Cory
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04-05-2011, 11:56 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2009
Zone: 5a
Location: Kansas City, MO
Age: 66
Posts: 4,773
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I've used alcohol and q-tips for scale. It works wonderfully if you catch the plant during a light infestation, I'm not so sure with a heavy infestation.
Joann
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04-06-2011, 05:09 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Grahamstown, Eastern Cape
Age: 46
Posts: 1,191
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I've been trying rubbing alcohol with scale at the moment; not sure if it works - if it doesn't, then I'll bring out the pesticides... I usually scrape the scale with a fingernail and then wipe quite hard over the area with a q-tip with surgical spirits on.
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04-06-2011, 08:59 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 3,806
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One note about fertilizers for roses, they tend to be very high in acid which may not be good for the plants. You might want to look at the balance to see what it is (10-10-30, or 4-10-10 for example) and what is in the contents of it (although this might require some investigative research on the internet to determine acidity).
I wish I could be of more help! And I'm terribly sorry to hear about your woes recently. Hopefully you can get rid of those pests and start enjoying your orchids again!
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