Rundownhouse
Well-Known Member
No, it had little legs, and was much, much smaller. Head of a pin size.
Update: After one application of pesticide, no noticeable improvement. Today I saw a couple very small, red spiders. One had a web underneath a leaf and I watched it eat a small gnat/fly. I also saw a bunch of ants on one leaf, and a weird little bug that looked almost like a hermit crab, the kind with a spiral shell on its back, only smaller.
More pesticide coming sunset tonight.
Just a few points on nicotine:
It's a great example of how the term "organic" tells you nothing about the actual substance you're using. Nicotine, organic though it may be, is toxic, environmentally damaging stuff. (Most "inorganic" fertilizers, on the other hand, are the purified salts of life.)
That being said, anybody should be able to apply nicotine and be safe, using reasonable precautions. Wear long sleeves and gloves. Wear a face mask if you're using anything bigger than a spray bottle to apply. If you spill it on yourself, go take a shower.
As for the selectivity of nicotine, it is true that it, and many pesticides, kill beneficial insects in addition to the bugs you don't want. The same is true of prescription antibiotics -- they kill your infection and many of the bacteria your gut needs to be healthy. Yet you'd be quite foolish to decline a round of amoxicillin if you have a raging sinus infection.
The same holds true if you want to save your plants. You may have some problems down the road as the local ecosystem adapts to the absence of beneficial insects. You'll also get diarrhea if you take antibiotics. But if you decide the infestation is bad enough, don't let that side affect discourage you from saving your plants.
Poppycock, a load of it. Nicotine is poisonous in vast amounts that you are nowhere near in danger of when using it as an insecticide.
The good part of the post is that, you should try to be selective if possible instead of "nuking".
By the way Gaseous Chlorine, Sodium, Phosphorous, Nitrogen are also deadly in concentrated amounts, your just never going to see those amounts.
I've also heard that Dihydrogen Monoxide can be deadly when inhaled. Lots of people have suffered, mostly in the summer months but occasionally in their own bathrooms.
Ghastly. Why has no one banned this particularly deadly substance?
TyTanium said:This is a real issue. Also causes all kinds of environmental problems - it's single biggest cause of loss of arable soil. Not sure why the Occupy movement doesn't protest this stuff.
Should we put and end to women's suffrage too, or just combat one problem at a time?
I think we agree that it's safe to use nicotine in the garden. I was arguing to just put on some long sleeves and go for it, which I think you also agreed with. Why poppycock?
This is actually the part we disagree on. I was writing in favor of "nuking", arguing that sometimes it's okay to do so, just like it's sometimes okay to "nuke" your gut microflora with an antibiotic when you have a severe problem.
I grew tobacco last year, it is one wierd plant.
The sprout for this goliath of a plant starts out too small to see and grows fast. Looks unnatural.
The plant is kind of oily and your skin smells of it if you touch it.
I get it, cobra venom is "organic" but not the best thing for you.
Just to be clear, steeped tobacco water is worse for you than most pesticides?
I said cigar butts. No added chemicals.