My Mites Wont Die

Wetdog

Well-Known Member
Use avid, forbid and floramite use one day one then the second one day 5 and the last day 10...... and you will see everything die
That you will, plants included, if you apply like that. You're only supposed to apply once every 30 days and with only one product.

No experience with Avid, but I alternate Forbid and Floramite when necessary. Using the Forbid correctly, like following the directions, I've never needed a repeat application. Never. 4-5 DROPS/qt of water is a max strength solution for the Forbid.

Here is where I get it: www.avidgardenpro.com

Good guy to do business with. Get the FORBID first, but you really need 2 or all three to alternate treatments to keep the mites from building up a resistance. Do not over apply or use more often than you should. That's the quickest way to get resistant mites.

Hmmmm that site isn't working. You can also search ebay for Forbid, Floramite, or Avid. All are stupid expensive, but a 1/4-1/2 oz of the Forbid or Floramite is all you need for a loooong time and is ~$20.

Wet
 

novice11

Active Member
I had the effing spider mites about 2 weeks before harvest. Drenched the plants with Mighty Wash from underneath and from the top, just soaked them. Mites disappeared and did not return and my harvest was clean.

I don't know or care how it works, there are few products you would want to use so soon before harvesting.
 

axionjaxson

Well-Known Member
PAN Pesticides Database - Pesticide Products
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Product Name: Black leaf 40 garden spray

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Product ID
Identifying information, including U.S. EPA registration number, product registration status, formulation and warning label, as well as links to sources of product labels and MSDS information.
Toxicity
Summary of the toxicity properties of each active ingredient and the percent of each active ingredient in the product.
Uses
Approved uses for the product by general use type, pest, and crop or location.
Registration
Product registration history, including initial date registered, date cancelled (if applicable), and date registration was transferred (if applicable).
Company
Name, address, and identifying number of the company that registered the product. Name and address of the agent, if applicable.
Distributor Names
Complete list of names under which this product is sold. Often a company will register a single product and then sell the same product under many different brand names. The 'Distributor Name' list is a complete list of these names.

Product Identification for Black leaf 40 garden spray

Basic Identification Information About This Product
MSDS and Product Label Select Source Product Labels and MSDS's - Crop Data Management Systems - Greenbook - No label images for this product in the U.S. EPA label database Material Safety Data Sheets - Vermont SIRI MSDS Archive - MSDSOnline - Cornell MSDS Collection - Where to find MSDS on the Internet
U.S. EPA Product Reg No
Product Registration Status
Formulation
Acute Hazard Warning Label
Restricted Use Product
PAN Bad Actor Product:
No. of names this product is sold under
5887-7
Cancelled
Soluble concentrate
2 Warning
No
Yes
2 (See bottom of page for complete list of products)

Toxicity for Black leaf 40 garden spray

Summary Toxicity Information for the Active Ingredients in this Product
For detailed chemical information click on the chemical names below

Active Ingredients
Chemical Name​
PercentCarcinogenDevelopmental or
Reproductive Toxin
Endocrine
Disruptor
Nicotine40.0 %
No

Legend
Indicates high toxicity in the given toxicological category.
Indicates no available weight-of-the-evidence assessment. For additional information on toxicity from scientific journals or registration documents, see the "Additional Resources for Toxicity " section of the chemical detail page for each active ingredient.

Other Ingredients in this Product
By U.S. law, only active ingredients (AIs) are reported. In addition to active ingredients, pesticide products may contain one or more "inert" ingredients. Many "inert" ingredients in current use have known adverse human and environmental effects.

U.S. EPA statement on inertsU.S. EPA list of inertsNCAP Inerts Report (pdf)

Historic Uses in the U.S. for Black leaf 40 garden spray

Note! This product is now cancelled, when it was registered it was used for the following:



Crops and Locations
Cranberries (foliar treatment) , Currants (foliar treatment) , Gooseberries (foliar treatment) , Grapes (foliar treatment) , Strawberries (foliar treatment) , Grapefruit (foliar treatment) , Lemons (foliar treatment) , Oranges (foliar treatment) , Apples (foliar treatment) , Pears (foliar treatment) , Apricots (foliar treatment) , Cherries (foliar treatment) , Peaches (foliar treatment) , Plums (foliar treatment) , Prunes (foliar treatment) , Melons (foliar treatment) , Cucumbers (foliar treatment) , Squash (summer) (foliar treatment) , Squash (winter) (foliar treatment) , Eggplant (foliar treatment) , Peppers (foliar treatment) , Tomatoes (foliar treatment) , Cabbage (foliar treatment) , Spinach (foliar treatment) , Onions (foliar treatment) , Corn (sweet) (foliar treatment) , Asparagus (foliar treatment) , Beans (foliar treatment) , Peas (foliar treatment) , Turnips (foliar treatment) , Aster (foliar treatment) , Carnation (foliar treatment) , Chrysanthemum (foliar treatment) , Columbine (foliar treatment) , Cosmos (foliar treatment) , Dahlias (foliar treatment) , Geranium (foliar treatment) , Gladiolus (foliar treatment) , Hollyhock (foliar treatment) , Iris (foliar treatment) , Delphinium (foliar treatment) , Lilies (foliar treatment) , Nasturtium (foliar treatment) , Pansies (foliar treatment) , Petunia (foliar treatment) , Phlox (foliar treatment) , Snapdragon (foliar treatment) , Sweet peas (ornamental) (foliar treatment) , Tulips (foliar treatment) , Zinnia (foliar treatment) , Canna (foliar treatment) , Cleome (foliar treatment) , Ornamental woody shrubs (foliar treatment) , Ornamental broadleaf evergreen shrubs (foliar treatment) , Roses (foliar treatment) , Spirea (foliar treatment) , Ornamental ferns (foliar treatment) , Poultry (animal treatment) , Chicken roosts (paint) (enclosed premise treatment) , Domestic dwellings (outdoor)

U.S. Product Registration History for Black leaf 40 garden spray

5887-7 U.S. State Registration Searches - Arizona - California via NPIRS - California via CA DPR - Colorado - Florida - Georgia - Hawaii - Idaho - Indiana - Iowa - Kansas - Maine - Maryland - Massachusetts - Michigan - Minnesota - Mississippi - Nevada - New Hampshire - New Mexico - New York - Ohio - Oregon - Pennsylvania - Rhode Island - Texas - Virginia
Cancelled
Feb 25, 1958
Nov 30, 1992
Maint. fee non-payme

Company and Agent Information for Black leaf 40 garden spray

ManufacturerAgentDistributor
Value gardens supply, llc
Po box 585
Saint joseph, MO 64502
Company Number: 005887
No Agent, See Company Info.No Additional Distributor, See Company Info.

Distributor Names for Black leaf 40 garden spray

Product namesDistributorProduct TypeApproval DateCancellation Date
Black leaf 40 garden sprayValue gardens supply, llcParent ProductFeb 25, 1958Nov 30, 1992
Prentox nicotine sulphate 40%Value gardens supply, llcDistributor ProductMar 31, 1976Nov 30, 1992

Working with the Information on this Page
Click on underlined terms for definitions or go to the Pesticide Tutorial overview page.
Any underlined term with a book icon
has additional information.


To print this page, choose Print. To export this data, choose Save As 'HTML Source' and open it in Excel or equivalent program.

Citation: Kegley, S.E., Hill, B.R., Orme S., Choi A.H., PAN Pesticide Database, Pesticide Action Network, North America (San Francisco, CA, 2010), http:www.pesticideinfo.org.
© 2000-2010 Pesticide Action Network, North America. All rights reserved.​
 

shrigpiece

Well-Known Member
Harka mectin £6. PIGEON MITICIDE. cheap and cleared mine up. 2 drops per litre. reapply a couple of times
 

Ganjarob

Member
flouromite. kills eggs and live mites. spray the entire plant thoroughly. shits expensive though $450 per quart. but you only use 1 mL per gallon of water. sometimes people will sell smaller amounts because they know that $450 is too much for some to afford.
 

ganjagoddess

Well-Known Member
MIGHTY WASH OR AVID,. the only stuff I have ever seen kill mites besides a lady bug and my finger.

AZAMAX IS CRAP, AZATROL IS DECENT BUT NOT ABLE TO KILL ONLY HOLD BACK UNLESS PRAYED EVERY OTHER DAY FOR 4-7 MONTHS MIN @ 1flZO per gallon per 64sq ft.
 

axionjaxson

Well-Known Member
i had a pretty bad mite infestation and when i went to get azamax i ended up buying BIONEEM by Safer. i mixed it up per the directions on the bottle ( 3 oz a gal) and i sprayed my vegging plants right before lights out topside and under leaves , all over the floor and all over the containers , basically all over everything in my garage everyother day for the last two weeks of veg and just to be really sure i did it everynight before lights out the first two weeks of 12\12. i mean i sprayed everything REALLY good . I did not have any kind of leaf burn or any kind of adverse effects , in fact i think they enjoyed it . I made sure to spray everything , even the lampcord and ballast . I am on day 34 of flower. Took this on day 31.DSC02917.jpgDSC02910.jpgDSC02929.jpg havnt seen a mite in over a month
 

ganjagoddess

Well-Known Member
Mites go into HYBERNATION with less than 16 hours of light a day... Most likely you still have them and dont even know....

Alot of people who get them in veg, then TREAT... then flower... they go away, but there just waiting....
 

crazyhazey

Well-Known Member
try to spray the bottoms of your leaves as much as possible, canola oil spray will help but try to keep it away from flowers if you can.
 

axionjaxson

Well-Known Member
Mites go into HYBERNATION with less than 16 hours of light a day... Most likely you still have them and dont even know....

Alot of people who get them in veg, then TREAT... then flower... they go away, but there just waiting....
normally i would agree and with any other product i would normally agree , but i check everyday for eggs or mites and there is absolutely none , the only way to rid yourself of them is to spray spray spray.
 
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