Spider mites during flower HELP PLEASE!!!!

Hey guys I just noticed spider mites have gotten hold of 2 of my plants. It's not too bad yet. On is at week 6-7 and my other is around 4-5 weeks into flower. Is there anything I can put on them this late? Thanks in advance
 

Rob Roy

Well-Known Member
This might sound like a joke, but I've used a small wet vac setup to clear some aphids off plants around week 6 or 7 in flower. (Perpetual grow tent) . If you do it right you get the gnarly brown and yellow leaves without yanking any good green leaves or bud off. Might want to test it first if you've got a heavy duty wet vac though. (Oh fuck there go my buds!!)_ The one I used was a small one dedicated to the grow area, with just the right amount of suction.

Tent needed a cleaning and I caught the aphids before they were a huge infestation. Didn't want to spray anything on the buds at that stage and the wet vac was already there for the weekly deep cleaning so I sent the aphids to aphid heaven. Sprayed the hose opening at the end of the vac session with a combo of green cleaner and alcohol in case any aphids survived the suck vortex and tried to escape.

It may be worth trying on spider mites, BEFORE you add predator mites.
 
Yeah people have said you can do it up to harvest, others say dont, so I just used a little. Idk man it's my first grow and they were random bag seed. I just put them in front of the window from 7am-7pm then it's to the bathroom until the next morning. Nothing special at all lol.
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
This might sound like a joke, but I've used a small wet vac setup to clear some aphids off plants around week 6 or 7 in flower. (Perpetual grow tent) . If you do it right you get the gnarly brown and yellow leaves without yanking any good green leaves or bud off. Might want to test it first if you've got a heavy duty wet vac though. (Oh fuck there go my buds!!)_ The one I used was a small one dedicated to the grow area, with just the right amount of suction.

Tent needed a cleaning and I caught the aphids before they were a huge infestation. Didn't want to spray anything on the buds at that stage and the wet vac was already there for the weekly deep cleaning so I sent the aphids to aphid heaven. Sprayed the hose opening at the end of the vac session with a combo of green cleaner and alcohol in case any aphids survived the suck vortex and tried to escape.

It may be worth trying on spider mites, BEFORE you add predator mites.
I used the vac trick too so I could get to the end without spraying some crap like neem and ruining my buds. I used the crevice tool and folded a piece of plastic window screen over the tip and duct taped it in place. Worked a trick for sure. Was a real PITA to do but got rid of most of them and the crop was saved!

Used it to clean off buds as I harvested fresh off the plant too.

BugVac01.jpg

:peace:
 

sykeayou

Member
How did this end up for you? I got some predator mites, but i should have applied them all. I thought that I saw them moving around a few days later and was hopeful, but the spider mites are wreaking havoc. Wondering if the predator mites were dead on arrival or if the spider mites were just too settled in. My big blue cheese is ready to be harvested this week, but the jack has another week or so. It is my first grow and I am not losing out on this harvest. Especially when the buds look pretty nice. I've seen a few people say that when they chop and dry the mites migrate up the stem and collect on the end. I hope this works, otherwise I'm smoking some mites. Probably not the first time though. Hope you got rid of them
 

Caliverner

Well-Known Member
This might sound like a joke, but I've used a small wet vac setup to clear some aphids off plants around week 6 or 7 in flower. (Perpetual grow tent) . If you do it right you get the gnarly brown and yellow leaves without yanking any good green leaves or bud off. Might want to test it first if you've got a heavy duty wet vac though. (Oh fuck there go my buds!!)_ The one I used was a small one dedicated to the grow area, with just the right amount of suction.

Tent needed a cleaning and I caught the aphids before they were a huge infestation. Didn't want to spray anything on the buds at that stage and the wet vac was already there for the weekly deep cleaning so I sent the aphids to aphid heaven. Sprayed the hose opening at the end of the vac session with a combo of green cleaner and alcohol in case any aphids survived the suck vortex and tried to escape.

It may be worth trying on spider mites, BEFORE you add predator mites.
I use a shop vac all the time it really works
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
How did this end up for you? I got some predator mites, but i should have applied them all. I thought that I saw them moving around a few days later and was hopeful, but the spider mites are wreaking havoc. Wondering if the predator mites were dead on arrival or if the spider mites were just too settled in. My big blue cheese is ready to be harvested this week, but the jack has another week or so. It is my first grow and I am not losing out on this harvest. Especially when the buds look pretty nice. I've seen a few people say that when they chop and dry the mites migrate up the stem and collect on the end. I hope this works, otherwise I'm smoking some mites. Probably not the first time though. Hope you got rid of them
Mites don't crawl into the buds so if you do a decent trim on your buds all their webs and poops will be in the trim and your buds will be fine. Make oil from the trim and you can filter out the rest of the bad stuff.

If you usually hang branches to dry when cropping the bugs will climb up so I'd chop the whole plant and hang it so they all end up at the bottom of the upended stem. I just flat out refuse to spray anything on my plants once buds are forming so would rather fight the bugs by hand or with the vacuum to keep the numbers and damage down until I can crop.

I've never used predator mites but it can take a while for them to start making a dent in the bad mite population. They have to breed and hatch more soldiers too so it will take a while before their numbers are high enough to kill off the bad ones.

If you have had mites or other bugs in a grow room and can leave it empty for at least a couple weeks then keep the temps up to 90F any eggs will hatch and the babies will starve to death without plants to feed and breed on. Make sure to keep bags of soil out of your grow space t all times as they are often the source of bugs like fungus gnats, thrips and mites.

Good luck!

:peace:
 
Last edited:

Theman5

Active Member
This might sound like a joke, but I've used a small wet vac setup to clear some aphids off plants around week 6 or 7 in flower. (Perpetual grow tent) . If you do it right you get the gnarly brown and yellow leaves without yanking any good green leaves or bud off. Might want to test it first if you've got a heavy duty wet vac though. (Oh fuck there go my buds!!)_ The one I used was a small one dedicated to the grow area, with just the right amount of suction.

Tent needed a cleaning and I caught the aphids before they were a huge infestation. Didn't want to spray anything on the buds at that stage and the wet vac was already there for the weekly deep cleaning so I sent the aphids to aphid heaven. Sprayed the hose opening at the end of the vac session with a combo of green cleaner and alcohol in case any aphids survived the suck vortex and tried to escape.

It may be worth trying on spider mites, BEFORE you add predator mites.
I wonder if you could isolate each plant, get a compressor with air spray and vacuum to manually remove, then sanitize the area, and repeat with other plants that are infested
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
I wonder if you could isolate each plant, get a compressor with air spray and vacuum to manually remove, then sanitize the area, and repeat with other plants that are infested
You'd never get them all. Compressed air would blow them all over the room and I did the vacuum thing to get a crop to the finish line without spraying. I folded a piece of plastic window screen over the crevice tool for the vacuum, taped it in place and just ran it all over the leaves for thrips and mites. Keeps the populations down but can never eliminate them. The mite eggs are glued to the surface and thrips lay their eggs right in the plant tissues so neither will get sucked up. Defoliation near the end helps cut down on the time needed to do it.

The best plan is to spray the hell out of the plants in veg so you go into flower bug free.

:peace:
 

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Mighty Wash.
I can't see paying more for something like that when good old insecticidal soap sprays work fine against mites and thrips for sure as I've conquered both using it. I just bought a spare bottle of the Safer's End All concentrate for $14 and that makes 10L of spray. A 1L of the ready to go of the same costs a dollar more. I add 10ml/L of canola or neem oil to the mix and as long as you are diligent about sticking to a schedule and very thorough they are gone in a couple weeks. Every 3rd or 4th day for 4 treatments does the trick for me.

Something that kills the eggs too would be quicker but is generally much more toxic. May be needed if you have a room full of plants tho but for the average home grower with just a few plants the soap sprays work fine.

:peace:
 

Bugeye

Well-Known Member
I can't see paying more for something like that when good old insecticidal soap sprays work fine against mites and thrips for sure as I've conquered both using it. I just bought a spare bottle of the Safer's End All concentrate for $14 and that makes 10L of spray. A 1L of the ready to go of the same costs a dollar more. I add 10ml/L of canola or neem oil to the mix and as long as you are diligent about sticking to a schedule and very thorough they are gone in a couple weeks. Every 3rd or 4th day for 4 treatments does the trick for me.

Something that kills the eggs too would be quicker but is generally much more toxic. May be needed if you have a room full of plants tho but for the average home grower with just a few plants the soap sprays work fine.

:peace:
I'm sure you are right, I tried a lot of stuff when I had mites and the Mighty Wash worked awesome after many failed attempts with other remedies. I did not try and insecticidal soap so thank you for the advice.
 

Mirrordawn

Well-Known Member
8 week photo type? I think you're late on the game when it comes to stomping spider mites. They have a life cycle of about a month. Just harvest the plant and be more diligent next time. You use any products now your buds gonna be harsh and you just waste money on a problem that is going to be non existent post harvest

If you use neem oil, make sure you watch a video to show you how to properly use it.

What works for me, its is just go through the big fans leaves and use hydrogen peroxide on que tips and kill as many adults as I can. While spraying with eco friendly insecticide when working close to harvest
 
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