That's hilarious.. Im proactive eating chocolate and mountain dew and got here cause fungus gnats are eating my pot plants while high.. 😂 now im worried about this dudes neighbor.. 😂
I hung bug zapper lites over my plants and listened to them Zap! Left them up 2 months till the zaps stopped. No gnats now almost 2 years! ( I have indoor plants!) DONT KNOW ABOUT OUTDOORS? Rev. J 😊
John, you need to look into parasitic wasps as well. The nematodes only work with pests that come into contact with the ground, and they make a great ground force; however, if you want your battle over pests to be successful, you need to employ an airforce as well. Parasitic wasps are also pollinators, but they specialize in hunting down pests that are out of reach of the ground dwelling nematodes. The wasps specialize in hunting, and are highly adapted for that task! Every type of parasitic wasp will have its preferred pray, like aphids, leaf minors caterpillars, and so on. Parasitic wasps are another great type of insect to add to your arsenal, so look for ones that specialize in the pests your dealing with!
Power Up - Well you won't have to look very hard to find out about them, and if I'm not mistaken there's like around 1800 different species of them. Nothing by itself is effective, but it's part of a holistic approach. I have a Playlist on my channel I gathered from different places on parasitic wasps you can use to start your research.
Power Up - Hears a link to a place that has one variety for sale, that specializes in caterpillar hunting. www.planetnatural.com/product/trichogramma-wasps/ It's not an immediate solution, but rather one that works in the long term. If your smart, and plant enough extra crops the first year for the caterpillars to eat, the same year you release the wasps. The caterpillars will grow the wasps that break the reproduction cycle of the moths. You can get wasp species that target the moth eggs, which reduces your caterpillar problem before it starts; then also use wasps that target any caterpillars that slip through the egg wasps, and turn into caterpillars. After full reproductive cycles of your parasitic wasps, they will increase in numbers, spreading out to reduce pressure from the surrounding area. Providing lots of little flowers that bloom throughout the growing season, helps keep your wasps around, as they need to feed on nectar, since the adult wasps, like honey bees are a type of pollinator, which uses the nectar sugars to fuel flight.
Power Up IPM book says they are not very effective when applied outdoors. Die off/or fly away. Better for indoor/greenhouse. Best way to get the benefit from parasitic wasps is to enhance their environment so they they naturally populate around your crops.
Best thing to do is stop spraying broad spectrum pesticides. When you spray you deter the good guys. I used to constantly spray neem, but since I stopped and planted a few flowers, all the aphids died and all that was left behind was there husk, brown in color and with a little hole where the wasp exited aka Mummies.
got to love the haters. I don't see any videos on their channels yet they are quick to offer advice on how to make a good video. try taking your own advice and showing it to the rest of us if you believe you can do so much better than john.
A year later watching this again to refresh my memory. For the hose end sprayer to apply the nematodes does it mix the nematodes constantly as the hose water is flowing through it, or should I keep shaking it up and down in my hand as I'm applying to stop the nematodes settling at the bottom? Many thanks!!
Enjoy your work- glad you took time to explain your biologic organic form of gardening. I was always critical to your opposition to Mitleider or Aquaponic form of gardening- but I understand now that you explained what you are trying to accomplish with total ecological gardening.
I just finished treating all my indoor soil with nematodes for killing fungus Nats, good video! I have a worm bin full almost to big to move around, it got infested I rapped big bin with plastic to catch all the flyers 3 rounds of changing plastic. Just over a day not 1 flying Nats anywhere finally each time I changed plastic it had at least l00s. What a stubborn little bug to understand lol
Great video. I think it's every growers duty to learn IPM. Whenever you spray pesticides, you're also killing off and deterring the good guys that would naturally do the dirty work for you.
I love you videos my friend. So positive and such a great way to start my day with the right attitude. Your absolutely right, jts winter now nearly 2018, time for planning the next year, setting goals and getting supplies. Spring is as you say, in our lives and our gardens. Thank you!
16:42 Steinernema Feltiae. Thank you so much for this. I wanted to know what the product Scanmask from the company Biologic contained. They should just say on their website. I live in the UK so need to find these nematodes from a different supplier. Appreciate your video. I'm looking forward to using them myself.
John's videos are his videos. Often I imagine our youth watching his videos and learning to be proactive and taking care of their body. Don't watch these videos if you don't like them. Who cares whether "I" like a video? Nobody cares, lol.
This info helps a lot. It's so damp in Florida most of the time so being able to get a non-chemical solution like beneficial nematodes for my compost would be great.
Hi John. I did the beneficial nematodes a couple of years ago. I'm in Florida, Lecanto. The nematodes won't take our heat so I did it in the winter. I had a bad case of grubs (those big white ugly things) that eat the roots and just cripple trees and all. I noticed a big difference that next year and also noticed my earthworms were still there and happy. I need to do it again, it's not cheap, but worth it. I see ur doing it in May, is there something new or maybe a more heat tolerant nematode? Advice from anyone would be appreciated.
Thank you from Hudson, FL. I'm after the fleas and no-see-ums, and I checked out this video specifically for FL application/season. It's Nov 1 2024 (what a year) anyway now it's dry but I think I'll wait for a rain because I have some area to cover. I was worried that I was too late in the year but you saved me $$ and time wasting it in the hot rainy season.
hi John love the show wanted to now how can I reserve potting soil I just move in a apartment and want to grow sounthern greens and kale my kids love everything will be in potting soil so wanted to make it kids friendly and cost effective
Thank you for the video, subbed and liked. I am trying the Ruth Stout Method of gardening, now along with my compote area I have been seeing thousands of gnats above my compost and garden (ground covered in alfalfa with manure amend under that). Please please help me find the solution, nematodes, sal-suds/neem oil? what would you recommend?
i grew a dill plant to seed and i noticed it attracted alot of tiny polinators. later found out they were paratinoid (or something) wasps which are the ones that are parasitic to alot of pests. not sure of the effectiveness of the wasps but the dill was effective at attracting them.
Hey John, I just inquired to Biologic about their nematodes to help me fight off fungus gnats I get every spring in all my 1020's and transplant pots. The gnats were horrific for me last year and I think they come from my compost I put in my seed starter.
What about if you have a container garden? I'm using the rooting bags and a few regular containers and I have trouble with the holey leaves on my peppers as well as those little flies and freaking ants on the cucumbers :(
John, I have a bad fungus gnat problem and would like to get some nematodes, but I'm worried about them harming the bees that visit my little garden. Are they harmful for bees?
hi! are there effective methods of protecting our gardens with natural methods that does not require always having to buy stuff to protect them? Thank u!
Hey man! I got a question. In your opinion, what is the best climbing plant/vine for the desert? I'd love to move to Joshua tree, and I'm looking for a plant to cover a patio for shade. Obviously edible in some way or another would be best, but anything is fine, I just need some shade 😉
I garden in Austin, TX and have noticed that this climate here seems to attract about every kind of bad bug there is. I'm curious, but is growing in the desert easier with less pests?
FF: I just subscribed. Came here for gnat issues. I started my seeds indoors too early. My gnat situation is serious. Lost several of my starts (still have plenty of other stuff~3rd year over zealous gardener 😅) QUESTION: Is it safe to transplant to my garden bed when you know there was an infestation?
Treat the top of the soil with a peroxide solution every 3 days 3 times. 12 tablespoons per gallon of chlorine free water. That will take care of their young. Retreat every week after you plant.
Use BTi for fungus gnats if you are hesitant on nematodes...temperatures need to be right, BTi works anytime and doesn't need special storage or need to be used immediately like nematodes
@@carsonrutz9659 gotcha here is your adjusted statement as per your particular liking, and without abbreviations that normal people use and you were too lazy to lookup: "For your Integrated Pest Management and addressing your fungus gnat issue, you may eradicate the larvae using selective biological controls such as Bacillus Thuringiensis Israelensis, and yellow colored sticky traps (they're attracted to the color yellow) for the adult fliers to stop their rapid reproduction (they can multiply right after reaching adulthood)....meaning bacillus thuringiensis israelensis alone won't eradicate them without stickies to kill the adults, and stickies alone won't without the bacillus thuringiensis israelensis." Hope your head feels better
John to cool to talk to his viewers if you didn't know, IME, Di works when dry, as it damps off looses it's effect, drying soils is best way to reduce gnats. So use the soak first, let surface dry, add sand, then DI in it, the life cycle is 15 days, so stay on with, soap, neem, peroxide, dry them use the DI, what we do
how does nematodes help cure the garden while they are eat all Cucurbitaceae family plants and causes massive disasters on agriculture and food security and greenhouse products?
theres a shitload of varieties of nematodes all with different feeding and habitat requirements. infact i think there are many beneficial nematodes that are very target specific and useless against a wider variety of pests
Love the info! THANK YOU! Constructive point... make a point and then move on. Repeating = boring. and its boring when you repeat yourself. Also... repeating what you say.. is boring... repeating what you repeat makes one feel weary because one is unoccupied or lacks interest in one's current activity... repeatedly.
i think you both would like one of those top ten factoid channels with a kid's DRAWING of himself as the channel photo. Maybe just text over somewhat related pictures, over dubstep... idk.
Very lengthy videos to cover the topic I just watched a info packed video on this topic it was about 3min long. Also even jay the juice man kordich got sick and died yea he was in his 90s but we all gotta go
Lol, when you have his knowledge you'd understand the power that you possess. When you have that much knowledge people listen, he's slow like the plants.
I like "biologic" much better than "organic". "Organic" has a specific meaning in chemistry, so it's very weird to me to hear people use "organic" outside of the scientific meaning. "Biologic" sounds a whole lot more specific and targeted.
in a case where im covering my ground with plastic (sun soil solarization) i know the ground needs to be damp. my question: can i use a neem solution to wet the ground ?
John honey u constantly look like ur sweatin ur @$$ off. Here’s an organic solution to that. ICE! Put ice in ziploc bags and put them in your pockets, down the back of ur pants, socks or wherever u can hold them. I Was gonna say ice packs but don’t think there organic. Stay cool John love ur videos. Opps use that cold pack too.
word muh niggah :) HA! Shopvac in reverse! If I can I will just pick the plant up and take it to the bag and upside down or sideways put it on the leaves, then basically pat it off or whatever. If the gnats are in force and I am watering I just put a layer down over the top. You could add perlite and DE together and put a few inches down at the top of the plant, it would keep the buggies away from your medium :)
In light of the "new" tic borne disease (in north east and 10% fatal and 50% disabling) we need effective tic repellant!!!! geranium I heard plus clove N thyme hmmm we need a great combo for animals/pets and humans and well why not an all in one that also helps w/ all pests and like 4 thieves,bacteria/virus???
I am eating ice cream straight from the tub while watching UA-cam. Totally proactive. 👍
That's hilarious.. Im proactive eating chocolate and mountain dew and got here cause fungus gnats are eating my pot plants while high.. 😂 now im worried about this dudes neighbor.. 😂
I hung bug zapper lites over my plants and listened to them Zap! Left them up 2 months till the zaps stopped. No gnats now almost 2 years! ( I have indoor plants!) DONT KNOW ABOUT OUTDOORS? Rev. J 😊
Skip to 19:00 on how to use the Nematodes. Thank you!
Thanks for this
Thanks!
John, you need to look into parasitic wasps as well. The nematodes only work with pests that come into contact with the ground, and they make a great ground force; however, if you want your battle over pests to be successful, you need to employ an airforce as well. Parasitic wasps are also pollinators, but they specialize in hunting down pests that are out of reach of the ground dwelling nematodes. The wasps specialize in hunting, and are highly adapted for that task! Every type of parasitic wasp will have its preferred pray, like aphids, leaf minors caterpillars, and so on. Parasitic wasps are another great type of insect to add to your arsenal, so look for ones that specialize in the pests your dealing with!
adding "Parasitic Wasps" doesn't sound all that enticing, any links to proof they are effective?
Power Up - Well you won't have to look very hard to find out about them, and if I'm not mistaken there's like around 1800 different species of them. Nothing by itself is effective, but it's part of a holistic approach. I have a Playlist on my channel I gathered from different places on parasitic wasps you can use to start your research.
Power Up - Hears a link to a place that has one variety for sale, that specializes in caterpillar hunting. www.planetnatural.com/product/trichogramma-wasps/ It's not an immediate solution, but rather one that works in the long term. If your smart, and plant enough extra crops the first year for the caterpillars to eat, the same year you release the wasps. The caterpillars will grow the wasps that break the reproduction cycle of the moths. You can get wasp species that target the moth eggs, which reduces your caterpillar problem before it starts; then also use wasps that target any caterpillars that slip through the egg wasps, and turn into caterpillars. After full reproductive cycles of your parasitic wasps, they will increase in numbers, spreading out to reduce pressure from the surrounding area. Providing lots of little flowers that bloom throughout the growing season, helps keep your wasps around, as they need to feed on nectar, since the adult wasps, like honey bees are a type of pollinator, which uses the nectar sugars to fuel flight.
Power Up IPM book says they are not very effective when applied outdoors. Die off/or fly away.
Better for indoor/greenhouse.
Best way to get the benefit from parasitic wasps is to enhance their environment so they they naturally populate around your crops.
Best thing to do is stop spraying broad spectrum pesticides. When you spray you deter the good guys.
I used to constantly spray neem, but since I stopped and planted a few flowers, all the aphids died and all that was left behind was there husk, brown in color and with a little hole where the wasp exited aka Mummies.
got to love the haters. I don't see any videos on their channels yet they are quick to offer advice on how to make a good video. try taking your own advice and showing it to the rest of us if you believe you can do so much better than john.
welcome to UA-cam =)
I know but at some point we all get fed up with it and have to put our own 2 cents in.
3 3 rough cuts woodworking.
2 years later he’s at 622k, so, those people can keep hating
Thanks for sharing all your knowledge including all the little tidbits interwoven. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
A year later watching this again to refresh my memory. For the hose end sprayer to apply the nematodes does it mix the nematodes constantly as the hose water is flowing through it, or should I keep shaking it up and down in my hand as I'm applying to stop the nematodes settling at the bottom? Many thanks!!
You are such a good human being mate! Love watching your videos!
Enjoy your work- glad you took time to explain your biologic organic form of gardening. I was always critical to your opposition to Mitleider or Aquaponic form of gardening- but I understand now that you explained what you are trying to accomplish with total ecological gardening.
beneficial nematodes also grow in healthy rich soil with lots of organic matter like what you have. keep up the great work.
John, you definitely have worked hard, and 400k is a great achievement.
I just finished treating all my indoor soil with nematodes for killing fungus Nats, good video! I have a worm bin full almost to big to move around, it got infested I rapped big bin with plastic to catch all the flyers 3 rounds of changing plastic. Just over a day not 1 flying Nats anywhere finally each time I changed plastic it had at least l00s. What a stubborn little bug to understand lol
Great video.
I think it's every growers duty to learn IPM.
Whenever you spray pesticides, you're also killing off and deterring the good guys that would naturally do the dirty work for you.
It’s the food!!!!
Thanks, John for your channel. Your videos have made a tremendous difference in my garden in Florida.
Okay so the part I don't get is the RO water to mix and then hook up to the chlorinated city water, dose that not kill the nematodes?
I believe he has chlorine filters piped in before his hoses.
Great job bro! You got a answer for every question I got.
Congrats on 400+! You deserve it.
Now take a look
I love you videos my friend. So positive and such a great way to start my day with the right attitude. Your absolutely right, jts winter now nearly 2018, time for planning the next year, setting goals and getting supplies.
Spring is as you say, in our lives and our gardens. Thank you!
16:42 Steinernema Feltiae. Thank you so much for this. I wanted to know what the product Scanmask from the company Biologic contained. They should just say on their website. I live in the UK so need to find these nematodes from a different supplier. Appreciate your video. I'm looking forward to using them myself.
boy got serious real quick
John's videos are his videos. Often I imagine our youth watching his videos and learning to be proactive and taking care of their body. Don't watch these videos if you don't like them. Who cares whether "I" like a video? Nobody cares, lol.
Good stuff Brother . Thx for vids...
This info helps a lot. It's so damp in Florida most of the time so being able to get a non-chemical solution like beneficial nematodes for my compost would be great.
Some nematode species are Parasitic and hazardous to human health; which one/s
did you order John? Thanks
He got the beneficial nematodes
Steinernema Feltiae
Your knowledge is very interesting and versatile
Hi John. I did the beneficial nematodes a couple of years ago. I'm in Florida, Lecanto. The nematodes won't take our heat so I did it in the winter. I had a bad case of grubs (those big white ugly things) that eat the roots and just cripple trees and all. I noticed a big difference that next year and also noticed my earthworms were still there and happy. I need to do it again, it's not cheap, but worth it. I see ur doing it in May, is there something new or maybe a more heat tolerant nematode? Advice from anyone would be appreciated.
Thank you from Hudson, FL. I'm after the fleas and no-see-ums, and I checked out this video specifically for FL application/season. It's Nov 1 2024 (what a year) anyway now it's dry but I think I'll wait for a rain because I have some area to cover. I was worried that I was too late in the year but you saved me $$ and time wasting it in the hot rainy season.
@charlotteking8123 I forget, you supposed to keep them in the refrigerator?
Do you still recommend Biologic CO?
Came here for advice on gnats and now I’m worried about your neighbour’s heart 😢
pro trick: you can watch series at flixzone. Been using it for watching lots of of movies recently.
@Bobby Turner definitely, have been using flixzone for months myself :)
Kinda worried ab his too 😒
hi John love the show wanted to now how can I reserve potting soil I just move in a apartment and want to grow sounthern greens and kale my kids love everything will be in potting soil so wanted to make it kids friendly and cost effective
This dude is fuggin awesome
Can you put a link how you got this product
great timing!
Will this work for succulents? It’s usually a dry environment, can the nematodes survive and thrive? Will my little garden lizards eat the nematodes?
Right on spring. Awesome video.
Thank you for the video, subbed and liked. I am trying the Ruth Stout Method of gardening, now along with my compote area I have been seeing thousands of gnats above my compost and garden (ground covered in alfalfa with manure amend under that). Please please help me find the solution, nematodes, sal-suds/neem oil? what would you recommend?
i grew a dill plant to seed and i noticed it attracted alot of tiny polinators. later found out they were paratinoid (or something) wasps which are the ones that are parasitic to alot of pests. not sure of the effectiveness of the wasps but the dill was effective at attracting them.
Hey John, I just inquired to Biologic about their nematodes to help me fight off fungus gnats I get every spring in all my 1020's and transplant pots. The gnats were horrific for me last year and I think they come from my compost I put in my seed starter.
I have them soooo bad right now
What about if you have a container garden? I'm using the rooting bags and a few regular containers and I have trouble with the holey leaves on my peppers as well as those little flies and freaking ants on the cucumbers :(
CONGRATS!! 400K SUBS!!
John, I have a bad fungus gnat problem and would like to get some nematodes, but I'm worried about them harming the bees that visit my little garden. Are they harmful for bees?
How do you get rid of grass in your raised beds?
I've read a few ways but what's the best way?
Don't want any nematodes sneaking round in my garden at night lol 😆
Sometimes his humor remembers me Fox Mulder. Not sure if anyone else also thinks like me.
Why the heck was I thinking exactly about how he reminded me of Fox Mulder? Kinda looks like him I guess lol.
hi! are there effective methods of protecting our gardens with natural methods that does not require always having to buy stuff to protect them? Thank u!
SDD525 - Hi. The question was for John. Thanks!
Yea ya right John!✌🏿
Where can I get beneficial nematodes
I didn't notice if you took the screens out of your sprayer. I heard that is important to do.
Hey man! I got a question. In your opinion, what is the best climbing plant/vine for the desert? I'd love to move to Joshua tree, and I'm looking for a plant to cover a patio for shade. Obviously edible in some way or another would be best, but anything is fine, I just need some shade 😉
He mentions malabar spinach in other episodes :) welcome to the neighborhood :)
I garden in Austin, TX and have noticed that this climate here seems to attract about every kind of bad bug there is. I'm curious, but is growing in the desert easier with less pests?
FF: I just subscribed. Came here for gnat issues. I started my seeds indoors too early. My gnat situation is serious. Lost several of my starts (still have plenty of other stuff~3rd year over zealous gardener 😅) QUESTION: Is it safe to transplant to my garden bed when you know there was an infestation?
Treat the top of the soil with a peroxide solution every 3 days 3 times. 12 tablespoons per gallon of chlorine free water. That will take care of their young. Retreat every week after you plant.
Use BTi for fungus gnats if you are hesitant on nematodes...temperatures need to be right, BTi works anytime and doesn't need special storage or need to be used immediately like nematodes
@@B01 the hell is BTi? Acronyms make my head hurt
@@carsonrutz9659 gotcha here is your adjusted statement as per your particular liking, and without abbreviations that normal people use and you were too lazy to lookup: "For your Integrated Pest Management and addressing your fungus gnat issue, you may eradicate the larvae using selective biological controls such as Bacillus Thuringiensis Israelensis, and yellow colored sticky traps (they're attracted to the color yellow) for the adult fliers to stop their rapid reproduction (they can multiply right after reaching adulthood)....meaning bacillus thuringiensis israelensis alone won't eradicate them without stickies to kill the adults, and stickies alone won't without the bacillus thuringiensis israelensis." Hope your head feels better
Hi John. I live in Phoenix, Arizona. Do you live near me in this dry hot desert?
What about indoor knats?
I only eat bacon...haha kidding, great video as always John!
Big worm from Friday, WTF that got to do with me? Referring to the last next door, I came here to learn about fungus gnats.
Hey John, i was wondering if you still use DE to help with bugs?
John to cool to talk to his viewers if you didn't know, IME, Di works when dry, as it damps off looses it's effect, drying soils is best way to reduce gnats. So use the soak first, let surface dry, add sand, then DI in it, the life cycle is 15 days, so stay on with, soap, neem, peroxide, dry them use the DI, what we do
Hi John, do you still use nematodes to this day?
9:45 "Dip it in some guacamole, guacamole"
Winter here🥶
John what about planting Tansy as a companion plant to do the same thing?
Thanks John!
speed it up 1.5 then its watchable
fresh donkey s 2.0 :)
I am not going to put nematodes in my house plants for killing gnats. What else can I use?
Hydrogen peroxide solution 12 tablespoons to 1 gallon of water mist the top of the soil only drenching the first inch only. Don’t water in.
I wish you had put time stamps about where I can find out about each point you're making. Bummer
Me too. Makes it easier to skim through all the bullshit from this pot head.
is that city water being sprayed? what chemicals are in it?
I don't think city tap water would have any chemicals in it... let alone in enough of a concentration to do any damage
SavageSurvival well stated . chloramine * .
how does nematodes help cure the garden while they are eat all Cucurbitaceae family plants and causes massive disasters on agriculture and food security and greenhouse products?
theres a shitload of varieties of nematodes all with different feeding and habitat requirements. infact i think there are many beneficial nematodes that are very target specific and useless against a wider variety of pests
You say you pulled the lettuce out. How long can I go in vegas with lettuce?
Jason Gallardo April. warms up and spinach/lettuce bolts quick
GOOD INFO =)
Love the info! THANK YOU! Constructive point... make a point and then move on. Repeating = boring. and its boring when you repeat yourself. Also... repeating what you say.. is boring... repeating what you repeat makes one feel weary because one is unoccupied or lacks interest in one's current activity... repeatedly.
I am looking into veganics!
What kind of nematodes would i use in soil for marijuana??
Same kind
Can you eat artichoke leaves?
Gloria Young sure if you want to
I love your videos. But all your videos take to long, just to cover a small subject. Video about 10 minutes to 15 is perfect.
tho nail Yea , im @ the 7: 23 min mark waiting for him to get to the subject of his video title
i think you both would like one of those top ten factoid channels with a kid's DRAWING of himself as the channel photo. Maybe just text over somewhat related pictures, over dubstep... idk.
tho nail yeah hard out you should edit out some
Very lengthy videos to cover the topic I just watched a info packed video on this topic it was about 3min long. Also even jay the juice man kordich got sick and died yea he was in his 90s but we all gotta go
Lol, when you have his knowledge you'd understand the power that you possess. When you have that much knowledge people listen, he's slow like the plants.
Thank You
Thats a big box for those 2 small packages
Better john at least this one wasn't duplicate episode this time!
I hope you celebrated by getting some good sleep!!!
2 minutes in.. What's this video about again?
nice intro
I like "biologic" much better than "organic". "Organic" has a specific meaning in chemistry, so it's very weird to me to hear people use "organic" outside of the scientific meaning. "Biologic" sounds a whole lot more specific and targeted.
John that looks way more than 8 oz of water. Please correct me if I am wrong thanks
Your awesome
Nice Hail Mary John, after the LA videos don't Be a seedbox sell out get some sleep and keep on growing.
Why do they last only 18 months? Isn't this inoculation?
HENCHEMEN!!!
in a case where im covering my ground with plastic (sun soil solarization) i know the ground needs to be damp.
my question: can i use a neem solution to wet the ground ?
Grass feed meats and organic veggies, "in small portions!" *Plus a little exercise!! Life is Good!!!
they are so expensive for so little and only last 18 months. has to be away to keep them multiplying in the garden
i just let my soil dry a little bit. that works too
John honey u constantly look like ur sweatin ur @$$ off. Here’s an organic solution to that. ICE! Put ice in ziploc bags and put them in your pockets, down the back of ur pants, socks or wherever u can hold them. I Was gonna say ice packs but don’t think there organic. Stay cool John love ur videos. Opps use that cold pack too.
do the nematodes eat worms "red wigglers and earth worms"?
fans, and dietanacious earth on grow medium (inside)
Nathan Deneault DE works so well for me its almost all I use now, works great outdoors also, I use a shop-vac on reverse to spray it.
Don't like to use DE to much it kills earthworms.
Inside in the winter and all.. it is the only thing to do.. so natural too
word muh niggah :) HA! Shopvac in reverse! If I can I will just pick the plant up and take it to the bag and upside down or sideways put it on the leaves, then basically pat it off or whatever. If the gnats are in force and I am watering I just put a layer down over the top. You could add perlite and DE together and put a few inches down at the top of the plant, it would keep the buggies away from your medium :)
Thanks a lot man! great help :D
Someone needs an iron. Heehee
i would love to smoke whatever he is growing....
In light of the "new" tic borne disease (in north east and 10% fatal and 50% disabling) we need effective tic repellant!!!! geranium I heard plus clove N thyme hmmm we need a great combo for animals/pets and humans and well why not an all in one that also helps w/ all pests and like 4 thieves,bacteria/virus???
we all will die from something
I am Plant Based
Why do you giggle when you mentioned child predators?
lol did you perk up when he said child predators? he laughed when he said you want to exterminate or remove them. Projecting much?
Jdmsword14 sounds like you're the prevo haha
Hey, im like that 🐔chicken. But im trying.