Get Rid Of Those Garden Pests with Organic Pesticides
Your garden will not grow and flourish on its own; it needs a lot of care and detailed attention. But, aside from all the garden maintenance you have to do, there are the garden pests and worms to deal with.
Keep the Garden Clean
A beautiful garden attracts attention and unwanted guests. If a garden is not regularly cleared of rotting leaves and other debris, insects and other pests will invade the garden.
Here is the lowdown on garden pesticides:
The fastest way to get rid of these pesky insects and nematodes (worms) is use pesticides.
- It is harmful not only to unwanted guests but can pose health risks to humans and pollute the environment. Some plants cannot take the strong chemicals too.
- Leaves should not be left on the ground to rot, but must be raked immediately and placed in a compost heap to prevent flies and other insects from laying their eggs on the rotting leaves.
Crops should be harvested at the right time.
- Over-ripe fruits or mature vegetables left out there in the garden un-harvested attract a lot of insects and worms. Tomatoes, for example, can be plucked when they are approaching maturity and ripened indoors.
If you have a vegetable garden, then using chemical pesticides is definitely not an option for you.
- However, there are ways in which you can get rid of garden pests without ever using these harmful chemical pesticides. Organic pesticides are the better, safer, and cheaper alternative to toxic pesticides.
- These will poison the body's system or cause violent allergies. The only downside to using organic pesticides is their effectiveness to specific types of insect. It is necessary for you to know what type of insects is damaging your plant so you can get the right organic pesticide.
From insecticidal soaps to Diatomaceous earth, which looks like chalk powder and is harmless to humans but deadly to insects. Most of these organic pesticides are also harmless to birds, dogs, and cats, which is ideal if you have pets in your house.
- You can also use insect repellants like a garlic-based insect spray. Most insects find garlic distasteful, thus they leave garlic alone. If you spray it on other plants, its odor and taste will be enough to repel plant eating insects. Garlic-based sprays lose their odor in a matter of minutes, so frequent spraying is a must.
- A cup of chili peppers is boiled in a gallon of water. Use gloves and proper protective clothing and facial protection when handling the solution; it does sting. When cooled, you can spray or manually wipe the 'hot' water on the undersides of leaves where aphids hide. It may be a tedious job, but it works.
No comments:
Post a Comment