Quote:
Originally Posted by KikaMaggie
Thank you very much for your reply.
I can’t find this pesticide for home use here in Portugal. Are the “all purpose” supermarket pesticides efficient?
May I spray the flowers and spikes?
I’m hoping to save the other vandas that are all with spikes, and thrips…
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I couldn't comment on the pesticide without knowing the active ingredient.
Isolate the plants that have thrip damage.
Can you tell us more about your growing environment and your collection?
I don't believe thrips will be able to pierce vanda leaves to feed, only flowers and buds. Also, if they are hanging and not potted that will be an advantage as thrips spend one of the stages of their lifecycle in the soil.
I have had thrips in my growroom for about 20 months. Right now I have 60 catasetum with leaves, it is impossible to eradicate them, so I am using a "knock down strategy" until my catasetinae are leafless and I actually have a chance of eradication. I have found it possible to bloom an infected plant by isolating it and treating it separately while the plant is in spike. Once the flowers open the pesticide really takes a toll on the flowers worse than thrips, but if you isolate and treat the plant during spike there is a chance of a normal bloom.
---------- Post added at 03:05 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:57 PM ----------
While you are looking for a pesticide...
Try submerging the whole plant in a bucket water for 15 minutes or so.
Also, use a strong squirt gun to spray spikes to attempt to reduce thrip population (all life cycle stages except adult will be invisible to the naked eye). They get into the buds if the infestation is severe and will cause bud blast. If you already see damage to the buds (like the one in the pic) the cause is hopeless.