T
Treeonefive
- 53
- 8
It's definitely munching, and could easily be thrips. A quick internet search came up with this:
How do you get rid of thrips?
Get thrips off the leaves of outdoor plants with a blast of water from the hose. Focus on the underside of leaves where they gather. For indoor plants, apply a solution of soap and water on leaves with a spray bottle. Mix 2 teaspoons of dish soap with a gallon of water and saturate all parts of the infested plant.
The nice thing about this treatment is it will work for a number of your garden variety insect pests.
All should be tossed in to a burn pitI have thrips (indoor plants) and purchased Ortho BUG BGONECO and does not seem to be working. I think I was too late for almost all my little ladies; my two big girls are fighting the good fight but a lot of leaves "inside the canopy" have died although the majority of the leaves look okay--some are munched (sucked), some have discoloration which I believe is due to spraying them the lights and burning them. Ive got a bunch of fly glue traps which are doing pretty well. Outside on my Asiatic Lilies I use dishsoap/water mixture--as well as for my ongoing late night earwig massacre but I was unsure about using it on my girls as I cannot seem to see any of the little buggers but the damage is there and the glue traps have a good number of thrips stuck to them--so I added 8 more. A friend of mine, years ago, used to do something when she got spider mites on houseplants which included showering them.
HELP!!!! I DON'T WANT TO LOSE MY BIG GIRLS .... I THINK IT'S TOO LATE FOR MY LITTLE CLONESView attachment 1266644
Jeezuuz, maybe the little ones but the big girls still seem pretty healthy if I can get rid of the thripsAll should be tossed in to a burn pit
All should be tossed in to a burn pit
Nothing in those pics I would try and salvage.Jeezuuz, maybe the little ones but the big girls still seem pretty healthy if I can get rid of the thrips
Are you sure, because my research said thrips ..... some leaves have "slime" looking stuff on them.while i see thrip damage , all of that is not thrips...its mites,,and its a bad infeststation.
Fortunately there are a decent selection of OMRI approved Natural pesticides (biocides) that can help ward off many of the diseases these insects can carry. Outdoors, preventative measures will go along way towards having a successful grow. There are many brands out there. Southern Ag makes a Garden Friendly Fungicide. Werner products are pretty good. Neem oil. The idea is to build up the plant's natural defenses using microbes prior to flowering. Many of these products, especially those that contain Neem oil, will change the taste of the flower in an undesirable way. So don't use them on flowering plants.Kind of confusing with pictures from different grows. The OPs (first post) damage is not thrip which is tiny white spots that look very similar to mites. They’re super easy to see with a loop.
The small circular holes grouped together are leafhoppers. They’re easy to spot if you spend any time hanging in the garden. The leaf damage is cosmetic, but they do carry various diseases that infect your plants. Hard to really spray for them as they’ll just fly away to a neighboring plant and come back the next day. They’re all over the place and not limited to cannabis. I’d hand pick, but have never had a population do serious damage. (I think the real problems happen to woody (trees) and perennials that die form the various virus diseases, as opposed to annuals like weed.)
The large holes are probably slugs or grasshoppers. I’d lean towards a flying insect as no reason for a slug/snail to crawl up to the top leaves to snack, where as the grasshoppers fly around and land on the upper leaves. Either way, not a huge issue unless they really get out of hand.
When you’re growing outside there’s going to be bugs, and no way to erratic them as they’re in your neighbors yards, in the forest, everywhere. Some like mites and worms can really fuck you if they get established and you really need to be proactive. It’s primary just a learning curve to find out what the serious problem pest are in your area and work to knock them down. If they’re all over the plant, it’s a problem. But if the damage is localized don’t stress every leaf chomp.
I’m no expert, but pretty sure the bacterium carried by the leaf hoppers isn’t controllable by any fungicides. But as mentioned I’ve also never heard of cannabis having curly top or big bud (tomatoes) or any of the fruit tree diseases that are carried by the hoopers. So I don’t think of them as a “problem” in cannabis grows, just that you don’t want them around in your garden in general.Fortunately there are a decent selection of OMRI approved Natural pesticides (biocides) that can help ward off many of the diseases these insects can carry. Outdoors, preventative measures will go along way towards having a successful grow. There are many brands out there. Southern Ag makes a Garden Friendly Fungicide. Werner products are pretty good. Neem oil. The idea is to build up the plant's natural defenses using microbes prior to flowering. Many of these products, especially those that contain Neem oil, will change the taste of the flower in an undesirable way. So don't use them on flowering plants.
Disclaimer: Southern Ag claims the product can be used right up to the day of picking. I would want to hear cannabis growers feedback before I would accept that as "golden."
Edit: I forgot this part. Indoors, there's not much in the line of natural predators. I would seriously consider complete destruction of all plants, followed by a thorough cleaning/disinfecting and finished with a thorough pesticide application prior to starting any new indoor grow.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?