What the %#£# is this @&$$

... I'm not sure of this, but colored sticky traps might help? Blue or yellow are attractive colors,.... snuff the adults and cut them down before they can breed more...
 
..make up a solution in the spray bottle... usually with CW, a little under 1 tsp/L is plenty... use RO/DI/low ppm water if you can 9less residue), mix it up and spray it on a fan leaf, glass or plastic ( a hydrophobic surface) to see if it's coating nicely, not beading up, that'll be the tell,.. (won't hurt the fan one bit),.... if it's good, add the alcohol (assuming it's70%, use less if it's 91+%) and let'm have it! Larvae may be hand-to-hand combat :nono: :rofl: .. toothpick to poke and scrape the fekkers out of hiding, but the spray with alcohol in it will have them MOST unhappy! I just want to make sure you don't muck up your res' solution going nuts on them...:rofl:
Awesome Waira! You make me laugh, thank you :thumbsup:
 
:passit: Cheers luv! I battle several vermins growing outdoors,.. it's a war, not a battle- :pimphand:... I do get a lot of help from a great product called SNS209, an organic (? -plant based at least) systemic made from rosemaric acid... Fouls the juices so most sap suckers piss off! .... By near harvest time, you stop adding it a couple weeks before to metabolize out,... But some flying aphids still land and immediately start crapping out babies even before they start to feed, so I end up using that spray, or a spinosad spray to blast them- :hothot:
 
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I have fungus gnats that won't die or go away. After this round in my garden I am throwing out the hydroton I have and buying new stuff. And bombing the grow room when all the plants finish. Going to get rid of them before next round
I’m with you on that, I’ll be junking waterlines, airlines, hydroton, air stones, whatever else seems appropriate. The expense seems minimal compared to the potential cost of all that could go wrong.
 
@Waira Don't you love parthenogenesis? Hmmmmmm say it slow.. Gag..
I soak my hydroton/hydrocorn in a mild bleach solution and rinse well. Good scrub of everything with dish soap and bleach, rinse and let air dry. Isopropyl alcohol is great to sterilize after you clean, 70% solution is the usual you get. I've gotten 95% and just dilute it. I spray my tent down after I clean and let it evaporate, I even use it on my plants diluted 50% it's one of my favorite sterilizers/pest control substances. Desiccates the pests, I love watching them practically melt under my microscope. Fk those bastards.
I eliminated spider mites this way and they hide in every crevice and go into an armored diapause, so the fungus gnats and drain flies should be goners too.
Dr. Doom bombs are the bomb, I set one off in the tent after sterilizing and let air out a day or so before resetting my system. Vacuum/wipe down etc.
Cleanliness and sterilization are key!
 
:smoking: DG, no need to do that for the gnat's, the larvae can only survive in some sort of medium, not aqueous though,... adults don't really feed, and are little more than flying gonads- :rofl: easy kills, stickies can help there too,... Now, I'm not a a hydro' experienced grower, so I'm not sure if Bt (mosquito bits/pucks; Bonide and Summit are the common brands) is a viable option for hydro,... you can get liquid only products, or you can also make a "tea" with the granules which is what I do for soil. ( @NorthernLights_420 )-- For a gallon of tea, I use about a 1/4c of granules, 1fat T of molasses and a dash of nutes for a little quick fuel for them,... drop a little airstone in there for best results, set someplace warm and let brew for a day or so, then treat the pots; a full soaking isn't necessary, for say 3gal pot I put in about 1L,... the bacterium will persist in the soil for a while, but it takes a few days to get busy killin', they must ingest the Bt to become infected,...

@davisgirl :pimp: -- ladies are self-sufficient! :hump: :crying: ... as a biologist, I find it to be one of the great work-around tricks up Mother Nature's sleeves! Especially in vertebrates, isolated populations that somehow managed to evolve that trick in quick order to survive,...:bow: :wiz: .... but for the bugs, like aphids on my plants, I'm not f'ing amused anymore- :cuss: :rofl:
Alcohol can work wonders indeed if applied rightly,... one of the home made all purpose vermin blasters we used at the orchid nursery was a blend of Ultrafine horticultural oil, water, wetting agent/dish detergent, and alcohol... Nothing developed resistance to that! You just had to be careful on which species you sprayed, some had leaves that couldn't tolerate it,... but I use it on cannabis for certain application as well,... Otherwise, I've been liking the spinosad containing products for spot-shotting bugs, aphids mainly these days, as the SNS209 repels the rest well enough.... again, that wetting agent plays a big role in cutting through their natural repellancy and getting proper contact with the pesti' solution....
...... I like how you think luv, clean is mean!:warrior: :clapper:
 
You have the patience of a saint for outdoor growing Waira! Maybe after a couple years of growing I’d be alright, but I think as a new grower I’d be a nervous wreck. I don’t take it for granted for a moment that everyday the sun shines, temperature and humidity are ideal, plenty of food, and no pests (present crisis excluded).
 
Damn Waira, you're a walking encyclopedia of Neat Stuff. I did see some growers use mosquito dunks in hydroponics but not in flower, I'd prefer to use the more natural concoctions first.
I would love to get my hands on spinosad, in Canada we seem to not have access to much.
 
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