There are also different type's of mite I had this problem a while back and after much research buying a microscope and doing more research I found that not only did I have mite but I had broad mites these stinkers suck (pun intended ) I have never seen an infestation like this before and had tried every killer I could think of or find on the market I even went as far as a T50 tobacco pesticide that has not been used since the 70's but once I had found what they were the problem was simple but really shitty to fix these lil bastards are immune to everything we can throw at them that is plant safe you could try 99% iso at 50/50 with water but this will most likely kill your plants so the only solution I found to this was kill everything that's rite all of it sry man then you gotta tear down and bleach the whole room and all your equipment wait a week for it to dry out and keep the room cold and light as someone else said already then start over and this time be sure to do a weekly preventative spray as even tho they are immune to most things they wont get near hot pepper sprays (capsaicin) and tend to turn from soaps and pyrethrin's as well but once they like your room and plants they aint leaving NOW in conclusion to this I would also like to say this was just my experience this dose not mean this is what you have or what you must do it just sounds really similar to my problem and if you don't want to waste anymore time and money trying to fix them then this is most likely the way you should go about it
IMO
Bolded and underlined--no it will
not kill your plants. This is the method I
regularly use for treating spider mites, along with JMS Stylet if my issue is outdoors. If you don't saturate the soil with the iso, you're
fine. There is also no way they'll build up resistance to either of these treatments, whereas they're known to already be resistant to the three more popular miticides,
Avid,
Forbid and
Floramite. Also dichlorvos (No Pest Strips).
You might want to look at We Solidarity's thread on RAs, broads, etc. @
We Solidarity -- just go to his profile page and look up his postings, he's got some truly golden nuggets of information in the thread(s) I'm thinking of. Others have used heat to deal with broads.
For those who are wondering, why does Sea always see spider mites? Because her toyon are spider mite nurseries, and ain't no way I'm gonna go around treating every plant I see on the property with spider mites. Ain't no way.