In the winter, I am blessed (literally) with ladybugs all coming inside to get out of the cold. I don't buy them or remove them from the environment which is a big no, but they come in naturally. We have had them cover the walls like horror movie style some years. Naturally, they huddle together in a warm cool space for the winter and they hibernate together. Last year when they came in, I was like "hello ladies! I have this jungle for you!!" and I was able to scoop em off the wall and deliver them to my plants and they were active all winter in my plants and then come spring they vanished (went back outside since I haven't found any bodies). I do NOT want winter to come, but I am excited to see if they come back again this winter... I didn't break their hibernation as they were marching on in... There were some that I guess didn't have a job and they went back to their spots to hibernate. I left them bc I didn't wanna kill the lady bug population.
I’ve noticed a small amount of webbing on my Ponytail Palm the past couple of days. I assumed spider mites so started looking for suppliers for predatory mites. Nice to hear you’ve had a good experience with Natures Good Guys.
You have NO clue how helpful this is!! I'm not the most squeamish when it comes to regular bugs in our environment, but LET ME TELL YOU, I freak out when it comes to bugs on my plants 😢 I believe it is just the fear of losing something that I love and have invested soooo much time, money, energy, care, etc in. That being said, I get it - if you want plants, you must accept that you will have pests along the way. Anywho, recently came down with some spider mites, so I cant thank you enough for posting this! ❤
Your videos are so so good. I think ill always come back to this video for live pest prevention and treatment info. Thank you so much for taking the time to make such a thorough and informative video. 😊
I have watched several other videos on this topic. I've also read lots of different things about beneficial bugs as well. I have to say, I'm two minutes into your video and I'm already convinced that you have some your homework! Active infestation vs preventative! Not one other video I watched mentioned this!! They just bought the sachets (which are actually for preventative measures) and dumped them out. I guess it can work, but I like to do what's best and recommended by the company. Thank you for sharing this information! Very good video.. so far. 😊
As always, such a well researched and informative video! I’m glad to know that there’s a good outcome when using these mites because I have ordered some myself. Thanks!
Thank you for this video - super helpful! I've always used pesticides/miticides, but I just recently found spider mites on a couple of my plants literally a week before I'm leaving on a two week vacation. So, since I'm not going to be home to do repeated sprays, I ordered and just released 22,000 mites (p. persimilis and n. californicus) throughout my entire collection and I'm hoping they keep things under control while I'm gone. Super helpful to hear you saw an increase in webbing shortly after release - some people had some theories floating around on reddit that sachets contained actual spider mites, or that web spinning grain mites were included in sachets to provide food for predatory mites, as an explanation for sudden increase in webbing, and it all sounded bogus, so it's nice to hear a likely more accurate explanation.
This was great information. I’ve been looking for a good explanation about beneficial bugs… and was having trouble finding anything that was detailed and that I could understand. Thanks for this video.
I'm having back anxiety so I'm rewatching and your description of lady bugs is so accurate! Yes I'm blessed that they purposely come in my home in the fall/winter and while they do fly around they are mostly just cool around my plants, I'm assuming BC they are still "resting" a bit. I personally am against buying the lady bugs as they often are taken from outside. Like I said in my last comment on them though, they leave my home in the spring, I assume the same way they come in! It was a rare occasion when my dog would show me one walking on the floor and then I would pick it up and return it to a plant so it didn't get the squish. In my lady bug research in the fall I believe it said they will not breed indoors (I assume you need exact perfect for them conditions but don't know why for sure). I got a few cute pictures of them in the late winter early spring (Canadian seasons) hanging out on my plants. Knock on wood my only pests so far have been fungus gnats but they're not at a point where I feel I need to spray, a sticky here and there tells me if I need more and occasionally I catch a dog and then I know he's not as innocent as he appears 🤣 I love the "mom I got this heckin yellow butterfly stuck to my neck by no fault of my own" look 🤣
This video was incredible! So informative! Thank you for making it! I'm definitely thinking about beneficials but the cost is why I've not done it yet. 💚
Thank you very much for this great well researched & organised video. I like that you kept it well balanced. Your videos are definitely among the most informative and useful videos I found on RU-vid. It helped me a lot. When I have occasional lady bugs come in, they walk among the pots, never go on plants and after the trip happily walk away and out 😀 Cute, but not really helpful :-) I will carry on my pesticide treatments and preventive measures, and once I gather bigger collection of plants, I will try it out.
Great video and thank you for a very specific video on these pests. There are a lot of videos about this, but I would say your video goes All in and personal about those specific issues.. Keep up the great work Aloha Plant Life, and again Thank you...
Thanks, your personality helps to make this an enjoyable and informative video, take care from Australia. My issue is bamboo spider mites, and they are very difficult to be rid of. They are tiny as usual and live on the underside of the leaf in a very close woven web that seems water repellant. They are very destructive in as much as their presence is very noticeable with increased leaf drop and badly damaged, anyway I had thought of this method but have not yet followed thu'
Thank you for this!! Natures Good Guys are the best i have been using beneficial bugs as preventive for over a year and been so happy. i emailed NGG and let them know what my plant concerns were and they told me exactly what i would need for my concerns. Rove beetles are fantastic if you get Fungus Gnats. the place i get turned around is fertilizing, i always worry the fertilizer will kill my bugs. SF Nematodes are a must in our house, i have plants that like to stay in moist soil and they keep us Gnat free. NGG is the absolute best, today is actually Nematode day - know that Nematodes need Distilled water and they can be stored area for a bit (its on the package) so you can do your release of the live bugs and nematode on your next watering.
One thing important to mention is mosquito dunks (bacillius thuringiensis) will kill nematodes. I didn't know this when I tried using nematodes for fungus gnats and ended up wasting money.
This is an incredibly helpful video and I appreciate it so very much. I have used natures good guys beneficial nematodes for years for fungus gnats but never any other kind and I have an insane spider mite issues basically year round. Because I keep a lot of aroids and boy do mites love them. Shew. I'm going to try these and we shall see! Thank you !
After 45 years of growing plants, Ive had spider mites once on one plant. Same with mealies. It just hasn’t been an issue for me in south Florida. Since starting my new indoor collection, I had fungus gnats flying everywhere! If anybody walking by looked in they would’ve thought I’d lost my mind! I mixed 2 tablespoons of mosquito bits in a liter of water & let it soak for a day or so, then watered the plants. Ive done it twice & they’re gone! I firmly believe in that method & it’s cheap af.
Good video with lots of good information. I am not a big believer in importing non-native bugs, however. Too many times they can cause issues with the native species. Thanks for the video, though! I learned a lot. 🙂
I just bought the mix of different predatory mite species for spider mites. Shipping was TWENTY SEVEN dollars. I did also get some predatory mite food so they can last longer though instead of buying multiple vials of them throughout the month. Fingers crossed that they work!!!
Try and find some people in your area to start a buying group with. A couple of the Facebook plant groups in my area get together each month and go in on group orders so that the shipping is free.
I’m so late but I have two types of springtails in my soil (they came in a bag of soil I got my a plant store) They don’t bother me and I don’t bother them Even if I soak or pest treat my plants leaves. They are resilient and I feel like the live in the crevices of my orchid bark/coco choir to survive that
They’re not harmful to the plants and people who have vivariums and terrariums pay good money for springtails. Try posting them for sale in facebook vivarium and terrarium groups. And in case you’re wondering why such people want them, they’re vital in the sexual reproduction of mosses.
I personally haven’t tried them yet because I haven’t had a problem with fungus gnats since I started using mosquito dunk, but I have friends who use them and absolutely love them.
Spider mites should have their own food like yeast or pollen if they cannot find any other bugs to eat while on the plants. In that way, this will prevent them to eat the plants.
Great video. Just discovered your channel and you have been l super helpful! I just made and applied a batch of your natural pesticide recipe (tea tree and peppermint Castile soaps, rubbing alcohol, and hydrogen peroxide) to fight an outbreak of spider mites. My thoughts would be to apply that treatment for about 2-3 weeks; then on the last week, install predatory mite larvae sachets so they hatch 2-4 weeks later to eat the remaining spider mites that I may have missed when the natural pesticide strength has weakened. What are your thoughts on that plan? Will I just kill my predatory mites? Thanks!
Alocasia and Fiddle leaf figs get a bad rap like calathea white fusion as well :( I haven't seen a white fusion at the same time I had money or I would have one LOL I don't fear a plant bc of what other ppl say or don't say... I know I have light, I have humidity and since I am in Canada there are only about 2 weeks in the year where its "too cold" inside for some plants bc it's not quite time for the furnace as it's comfortable enough to just toss on a sweater. Last year I did lose both of the calathea I had during that period and they didn't come back, BUT now that I know I am simply planning to put a space heater by my plants which will all be moved away from the window etc bc the daylight will already be much less and that will keep the chill out of the air.
I'm worried about releasing lady bugs in my house and greenhouse cabinets but I have them coming in the mail with some mite sachets. Not sure why but I have aphids on my indoor plants. I tried lacewings and they just are not doing the trick. I've been trying for the last 3 months so I'm looking to eradicate them. Looking for feedback on what to expect with releasing ladybugs.
If it’s ladybug larvae you’re good. Adults in your greenhouse cabinet won’t be a problem because they can’t fly out of the cabinet. Adults anywhere else in your house are just going to flock to your windows or somewhere nearby. Particularly anything green nearby like a green rug, green sheets, etc. but rarely will they stay on your actual plants
Question about my rattlesnake calathea. It is not spreading as fast as i expected it too and now that i have groomed out some old sheaths and dried leaves it looks a bit leggy, but it doesn't really want to be closer or further from where it is or it doesn't pray right (i assume lighting is right when it moved the way it should). I lifted it out of the pot carefully and it did have a lot of roots and what looked like a corm on the bottom but I don't think they make corms? I put a layer of new soil on the bottom because it was poking through and had some missing soil. The roots were all over throughout the pot but otherwise not root bound bc like i said i had room to add fresh soil. Do you think there could be a mesh plug around it slowly the actual leaves from coming out when the roots are so dense or should I just say F it and move it up a pot size? I feel like it might be doing that pushing up out of the soil thing you mentioned one of your plants does in a previous video, but I am only thinking that because I noticed yesterday there are some roots that are actually growing out of the top of the soil LOL. The roots didn't suggest a mesh plug but the growth staying tight has me wondering. I don't think I would be able to remove it with all the roots. Those jiffy pot plant plugs with the mesh are clearly evil as every plant I've found them on were the plants that were suffering... I donno why the heck they use them on indoor plants where there are no earthworms and other bugs helping to eat the decaying material... GRRR
Mine all grow pretty tightly together and are fairly slow to spread outwards compared to some of my other Calathea. It’s hard to say if it needs to go up a pot size or not without seeing the roots, but you could always compare it to what mine looked like when we repotted it in my 1 year on RU-vid repot and chat video from back in February.
@@AlohaPlantLife thanks Drea! Knowing the growth is usually compact helps! I didn't think it needed a new pot when I checked it out I just added about half an inch of soil at the bottom and placed it back in, without disturbing the roots. The roots were coming out the bottom and then drying out and becoming desiccated. I trimmed that up BC duh but otherwise it looked not quite ready! I'm thinking in the fall maybe unless I start to see more roots on top. I don't want it to be dying from the even fabric plug though either!
Hello ma'am I don't currently have any bugs that know of and I don't want any so I was thinking preventative. I currently use neem oil every 2 months to keep bugs away. I only have like 30 plants and don't plan on many more. Oh and I live in hot Texas. What are your thoughts?
If you don’t currently have a problem and what you’re doing right now, seems to be fine then not 100% necessary to change anything. But if you do start to seeing pests then maybe it’s time to try something different💚
Research, research, research. And making sure I’m getting my information from reliable sources, preferably scholastic ones. So I guess it’s kinda like going to school for it but without actually going to school💚
Amazing information! Do you know if the swirskii mites also feed on the plant to survive in periods where it doesn't have food? I can't see any spider mites on my plant but see some of the spider mite damage so I'm not sure if the predatory mites can also cause any kind of damage in large numbers? Is there a way to differentiate the actual spider mites from the swirskii mites when you see them on the leaves? Thanks!
That’s probably a sign that some of them were dead on arrival. Not sure how long ago this happened but you should ask for a refund or a replacement. Or if you try a different company and have better luck with it, be sure to comment back here and let us all know.💚
Yeah I probably should’ve mentioned the importance of getting consent from all other household members before choosing to bring beneficial bugs into your home lol
@@AlohaPlantLife 😂 right! Years back I got the great idea of feeding the birds outside up until we got a bad batch & caterpillars were eating up our tree! Then they made cocoons all inside the house windows so when they hatched we we’re catching butterflies to put outside 😅