catjac1975
Garden Master
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2010
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- Location
- Mattapoisett, Massachusetts
Rotenone is organic and will work on the nymphs. I used to have a big problem with squash bugs. I don't know why that has changed but I have a few theories. I wrote to Organic Gardening many years ago. Truthfully they were not very helpful as they said squash bugs were not usually a big problem. Hmmmm what did this mean to me? Clearly I had an overpopulation of this certain bug.
One thing I always did was plant squash etc. in leaf mulch. This gave a place for the bugs to hide and multiply. I no longer do this. My chickens range in the veggie garden from hard frost until first planting. They scratch and eat all day long. I have also bought lacewing larvae, preying mantis casings and lady bugs. I bought them many years ago and there is still evidence of their populations every year. I don't actually know what pests they eat. I also use horse manure, chicken manure, lime, greensand, leaves tilled in, for soil amendments. When I see a squash bug I squash it and leave the corpse on the plant. What has changed my luck with these pests I don't really know.
The theory of organics is that weak plants send out a pheromone that attracts the bugs, and that healthy plants do not attract the pests.
I used sevin or something like it, once, many years ago and could smell it when I cooked the squash. I pulled up all of this plants. Hope this is a help to someone.
One thing I always did was plant squash etc. in leaf mulch. This gave a place for the bugs to hide and multiply. I no longer do this. My chickens range in the veggie garden from hard frost until first planting. They scratch and eat all day long. I have also bought lacewing larvae, preying mantis casings and lady bugs. I bought them many years ago and there is still evidence of their populations every year. I don't actually know what pests they eat. I also use horse manure, chicken manure, lime, greensand, leaves tilled in, for soil amendments. When I see a squash bug I squash it and leave the corpse on the plant. What has changed my luck with these pests I don't really know.
The theory of organics is that weak plants send out a pheromone that attracts the bugs, and that healthy plants do not attract the pests.
I used sevin or something like it, once, many years ago and could smell it when I cooked the squash. I pulled up all of this plants. Hope this is a help to someone.