I am privileged to know the scientist that invented BT ( Professor Thornley at USU) he said they use it on ears of corn when the hairs come out to stop corn worms. It’s good on potatoes, anything that eats veggies, I stopped him at the Bank one day to congratulate him on making the world a better place, . He’s gone now, I’m glad I took the opportunity to acknowledge him, he lite up like a Christmas tree.
I have 12 cabbage plants, and 12 brussel sprouts plants. I picked 121 cabbage worms off my plants today. And I've been using Neem oil! It's war now! BT it is!
Im an avid neem oil/castile soap/essential oil person myself. IT. IS. NOT. WORKING this year. I've heard of BT and have drug my feet to try it. Did you find it worked better than neem oil?
I'm so new to this and new to country living. I'm at war with weeds, cabbage worms, and the deer that destroyed my entire orchard in one night. I have no words except that I will win in the end lol.
Thanks so much. The worms destroyed everything. This is my first year growing food. I just sat down and wrote a list of what I learned, both what works and what needs to change. I love cabbage and next year I'll be far more diligent. One morning everything was destroyed. Just subscribed and looking forward to more organic tricks and tips :)
I live beside a nature preserve so have a serious critter problem as well. I've put my raised beds in 1/2" hardware cloth cages with removable tops and use drip tube sliced lengthwise to protect the edges from snagging me. So far that seems to also keep out the cabbage pests too. I have a couple of big wolf spiders too, and use a cloth to knock those white butterflies down so I can grab them and toss them into the spider webs. THAT's quite the show: spiders race out, discard the wings and wrap them up tight, and then repair the holes in the webs, ready for the next one! It's SO satisfying!
Thumbs up to BT. I learned, from Brian, about BT last summer and used it on all my cabbage, beets, lettuces, kale, and other places where I’ve found cabbage loopers in the past. BT worked like a charm. I didn’t have near the damage and was able to grow cabbage to harvest. I grew red cabbage but never noticed whether it had been chewed. I just went down the row. I didn’t realize I could be fertilizing at the same time. Yea!! That will simplify spraying next summer. Thank you again for a great vid.
I had success using nasturtiums as companion plants. They don't work as a deterrent, but as a sacrificial crop, because cabbage butterflies seem to prefer them. Also, if you aren't growing a huge crop, just rubbing out the eggs with your thumb before they hatch is much easier than picking off the worms.
@@pwu8194ey are definitely not the size of a hair. Very easy to see if you have decent eyesight or magnifying glass. One of the methods mentioned is even "picking" the worms.
Those cabbage worm set us back severely this Fall! No mercy for them. You are right, they are the master of camouflage. Great tips! We will be ready for them next season. Thanks for sharing. p.s. They seem to also like our purple Kale...
Thank you so much, you continue to teach me things i wish I'd known 40 years ago. My grandkids LOVE to run around with their butterfly nets to catch butterflies. I've taught them the only butterfly they cannot catch and release are those pesky white ones. They thus catch and dispose of those. But i still have the evidence of worms. You've given me even better ammunition to battle cabbage worms!
Oh thank you so much for these suggestions! I started SO many brassicas this year and planted out a TON of them after we finally made it past our last frost date here in Zone 6a, which has moved in the last several years to about mid-May. This is definitely going to save my Kale, broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower harvest this year! Also, on a side note, I built a modified version of your tomato trellis to suit our beds this year (I pieced together raised beds from scrap pallet wood, old split fence rails, and other scrap wood I had laying around), and I ended up making use of a bunch of old thick wire T-post clips that we rarely use, but we always end up with whenever we buy T-posts, to make my own string spools to hang the line for the tomatoes on the trellis, and so far, it is working out AWESOME!! I greatly appreciate your videos and information- your channel is a lifesaver! Keep up the great work!
Every time I look at my kale I am depressed... two have been eaten away completely. One is surviving but only just ... today found two worms and took them off manually. I am now going to get this BT product. Thanks a lot for tips. By the way I love your T-shirt! Once I get BT my 'matatas' will be over. I will be able to say "Hakuna Matata." :-)
Although I thought earwigs were making swiss cheese of my bok choy - I now am considering the simple cabbage worm as well! Thank you for this. I'll probably go with row covers or other netting on my containers.
There are so many other chemicals in most commercial cigarettes. You need to find pure untreated tobacco. It will probably affect the taste of the plants though. 🤮
Brian, I enjoy and benefit from your weekly videos. Hoping with your help that next year will be better than last. Just an interesting footnote, the brassica family is quite a large family of plants and weeds, but many people do not realize that the vegetables we grow in the brassica family are mostly all just one plant, bred for different dominant traits. Probably developed by the monks in the Middle Ages, who didn't have much else to do except gardening. I learned this interesting fact in college biology, it can also be looked up on Wikipedia. BTW, I grew red cabbage, and did notice a few holes in some, but I will be proactive next year. Brassica oleracea: kale, cabbage, collard greens, broccoli, cauliflower, kai-lan, Brussels sprouts, kohlrabi
I sure wished I’d seen this video when I planted my cabbage. My entire crop have been eaten up by the cabbage worms. I had no idea the little white butterfly was my garden enemy. I thought they were pollinators. Now, I know!!! Next year will be different. I have been able to harvest and salvage a few heads, but boy, them worms are relentless. Thank you for sharing your garden knowledge!
Thanks for the excellent video. I use BT to control cabbage worms and other caterpillar type pests and you’re right it works great. The biggest problem I have with brassicas are aphids. I have to spray every two weeks religiously to control them. It seems like they go from zero to total infestation overnight.
I started my fall crop of cabbage in my grow room in July & now its time to harden the off & get them planted in the outdoor garden.. . But man they're so perfect, I really hate to expose them to the insects! However, with BT in hand, I'm ready for those critters!!
Thanks for the reminder 😎 it’s been raining on and off here in DE for the last couple weeks. We’ve finally got a clear week so I went out and sprayed my BT on all my brassicas. Hand picking gets tiring 😪
I'm a bit late for today's video but its better late than never.... I can't believe that I have just learned so much from you on how to get rid of cabbage worms, now I need to find some cornmeals!!!
Thank you. Now I can identify the moth. BTW, you can use BT in a pond for mosquito control. Its toxic to the larvae. Thats what is in those mosquito dunks that you can buy at Home Depot.
Holly, great to know. I have two small fountains and use those mosquito dunks. (I originally thought I had tadpoles in the fountain until I realized it was mosquito larvae)🤣🤣🤣
@@NextLevelGardening I have a question will bt wash off in the rain every time I spray bt not long after I spray bt on my plants the rain comes I have sprayed my plants 3 times so far.
I find if I leave the caterpillar squashed bodies on the plant the butterfly will not relay eggs on that plant. They either smell or see the dead ones and they seem to feel it is unsafe to lay more eggs there. I've been doing it for the past 2 years and have had very few problems. I can then keep on top of the worms without any sprays.
Thanks so much for this! I've been spending 10 minutes a day picking them off. BT will be much easier! I used your affiliate link. Thanks for your content!
I live in Barbados a tropical country and its very difficult for me to grow cabbage the worms always destroys them.my best to grow them is from october to late Febuary may.i try not to use pesticides but we don't get the natural things to us like BT but your videos are very informative thank you.
Great info, Brian! I had given up on many plants because of the worms. Now you’ve armed me for next year. The way time is flying, it will be time for starting seeds before I know it. Thanks as always for your time and effort in sharing your wisdom. You are deeply appreciated!! Love and hugs to you, Emilie and Noah 🥰🤗❤️🥦🥦🥬🥬
Thabk you so much ive been looking at those little white butterflies flutter around my plants and just look at them adoringly because i had no idea what they were 😂😂😂 my cabbages are shredded up like a toddler with a hole puncher came along. Now i know thanks !
Imported Cabbageworms are nasty buggers. I'm wondering how many I've consumed this year in my kale salads since they are so camouflaged. Oh my. Love the videos keep them coming.
Great info! I always grow more than I need, but I can’t bring myself to offer a cabbage to neighbors that has been gnawed on. White butterflies are BAD news.
If desperate enough, that moth/butterfly will lay on the purple leafed brassicas. Not fool proof! With netting, I found it had to be kept away (ie on a frame) from the leaves. Those determined little critters will find a leaf touching the netting, and squirt their payload through the hole. I have no idea why I have so many of the cabbage butterfly here, I am surrounded by grazing paddocks. This is my worst pest in the garden.
You have mentioned this BT before so I am now curious as to what kinds of pests does this work for besides the cabbage worms. Also, thought you might like to know my broccoli and cauliflower are still doing very well. I'll do a garden update later today. And the herbs and lettuce I planted in the greenhouse have been thriving too!
@@NextLevelGardening - That's terrific! How about squash bugs? I had those at the end of the season this year and I am afraid they will be back again next year.
I have one cabbage plant. Bought it in a whim, and say the holes right away. I then found 8 worms on that one plant! I flicked them off, but I’m sure there are more. Ima plants some sacrificial plants to try to save it. But if it doesn’t, I’m ok with it
I have badminton rackets everywhere for those white butterflies. I also put bowls of beer for the slugs. I need an organic spray that won't kill my good bugs.
This awesome cheers, 99% of my cabbages and brocolli got decimated last year, the purple sprouting brocolli survived. I'm not even a massive fan of cabbage I just love how they look, I'll grow red cabbage only next year. 1 weird thing though, I pulled all my cabbages out of the ground and put them into pots to try to save them, they all got eaten except..... The ones I put next to a gooseberry Bush. No idea why.
I had these a few months ago and used D.E. and it worked pretty well, I think. Do the cabbage worms glow like tomato hornworms do under blacklight? Hunting hornworms was honestly the most fun I had in my garden all summer. I didn't think to check cabbage worms which popped up a few months after.
So strange - I planted red cabbage this year along with green and to my surprise the red cabbage has had far more damage from white moths/worms than the green cabbage right next to them! And the green worms are just as hard to find.
I have around 14 different brassicas growing rn. I have 2 inedible cabbages (on accident). They seem to really just go after the purple inedible cabbage.
I'm going to assume you're referring to BTi , and not BTh . I'm very careful where I use even these type controls including spinosad because my wife raises Monarchs and even though they don't eat cabbages the butterflies are attracted to the flowers. So I'll pollinate the female flowers on there first day opening with a male flower. twist tie the blossom closed and keep the male flowers mostly cut off. That and inject and spray the base with spinosade . That's a little more trouble but It keeps her happy and I'm to old to be doing the vegetable garden by myself. Thanks for confirming many of the same things I've been doing for over 40 years and giving me some interesting alternatives. I have a question wile I'm thinking about bugs, My first wife's uncle Used to collect any bugs that were bothering his truck garden then dry them out crush them add a fare amount of skim milk and let this ferment for maybe 10 days, run it through a screen and mix it with about 10 gallons of water and spray those affected plants. This seemed to work pretty darn well. This was over 35 years ago and I'm sure he's not around any more to ask. Do you have any idea what he was making?????
I have a Question. I got the BT mentioned in the video. I sprayed my cabbage and brocolli completely. I noticed that a lot of it was beading up and runnung off the plants. Is this normal? Or am i missing something that helps it stick to the plants?
I am privileged to know the scientist that invented BT ( Professor Thornley at USU) he said they use it on ears of corn when the hairs come out to stop corn worms. It’s good on potatoes, anything that eats veggies, I stopped him at the Bank one day to congratulate him on making the world a better place, . He’s gone now, I’m glad I took the opportunity to acknowledge him, he lite up like a Christmas tree.
I have 12 cabbage plants, and 12 brussel sprouts plants. I picked 121 cabbage worms off my plants today. And I've been using Neem oil! It's war now! BT it is!
Neem oil does not work on them.
Im an avid neem oil/castile soap/essential oil person myself. IT. IS. NOT. WORKING this year. I've heard of BT and have drug my feet to try it. Did you find it worked better than neem oil?
I'm so new to this and new to country living. I'm at war with weeds, cabbage worms, and the deer that destroyed my entire orchard in one night. I have no words except that I will win in the end lol.
Dang! I would've never thought of the purple plants deterring the worms! You're amazing! I didn't think they would care or think about it.
Back in the old days...we used to cover the cabbages and cauliflowers with panty hose! Strange but it worked!
can you pls explain more pls because I know my parents did but I am not sure when to put it on the plant
Thanks so much. The worms destroyed everything. This is my first year growing food. I just sat down and wrote a list of what I learned, both what works and what needs to change. I love cabbage and next year I'll be far more diligent. One morning everything was destroyed. Just subscribed and looking forward to more organic tricks and tips :)
Perfect timing for this video, thank you! Those bugs and worms are sooooooo disrespectful. 😡 I will be trying BT for sure 👍🏽
I've been using BT since I planted my first garden in 1980. It works! Love the idea of foliar feeding at the same time!
Oh wow! Game changer! Thank you!! I've searched every leaf and cannot find the darn worms. I'm going to the nursery now! Thanks!!
I live beside a nature preserve so have a serious critter problem as well. I've put my raised beds in 1/2" hardware cloth cages with removable tops and use drip tube sliced lengthwise to protect the edges from snagging me. So far that seems to also keep out the cabbage pests too. I have a couple of big wolf spiders too, and use a cloth to knock those white butterflies down so I can grab them and toss them into the spider webs. THAT's quite the show: spiders race out, discard the wings and wrap them up tight, and then repair the holes in the webs, ready for the next one! It's SO satisfying!
Thumbs up to BT. I learned, from Brian, about BT last summer and used it on all my cabbage, beets, lettuces, kale, and other places where I’ve found cabbage loopers in the past. BT worked like a charm. I didn’t have near the damage and was able to grow cabbage to harvest. I grew red cabbage but never noticed whether it had been chewed. I just went down the row. I didn’t realize I could be fertilizing at the same time. Yea!! That will simplify spraying next summer. Thank you again for a great vid.
Very helpful! Here all these years, I didn't know I could combine the foliar feed with the Bt. Thank You!
I had success using nasturtiums as companion plants. They don't work as a deterrent, but as a sacrificial crop, because cabbage butterflies seem to prefer them. Also, if you aren't growing a huge crop, just rubbing out the eggs with your thumb before they hatch is much easier than picking off the worms.
The worm is about the size of a hair, I imagine the eggs might be even smaller. Rubbing eggs off isn't an easy task.
@@pwu8194ey are definitely not the size of a hair. Very easy to see if you have decent eyesight or magnifying glass. One of the methods mentioned is even "picking" the worms.
Those cabbage worm set us back severely this Fall! No mercy for them. You are right, they are the master of camouflage. Great tips! We will be ready for them next season. Thanks for sharing.
p.s. They seem to also like our purple Kale...
Thank you so much, you continue to teach me things i wish I'd known 40 years ago. My grandkids LOVE to run around with their butterfly nets to catch butterflies. I've taught them the only butterfly they cannot catch and release are those pesky white ones. They thus catch and dispose of those. But i still have the evidence of worms. You've given me even better ammunition to battle cabbage worms!
Thank you
Im getting a butterfly net...I will look less crazy chasing these little bastards!
What a great idea to add liquid fertilizer to the BT! Thank you!
Home Depot and Lowe's usually carry it labelled as Thuricide - dilute as directed but use it fairly quickly - dilution doesn't keep.
I had no idea I could spray for pests with BT and use fertilizer all at the same time! So good to know! Thanks!
I had red cabbages, butterflies didn't care, still ate them.. Fine bird netting helps..
This is great! Thank you. This helps me plan my spring garden a bit better!
Oh thank you so much for these suggestions! I started SO many brassicas this year and planted out a TON of them after we finally made it past our last frost date here in Zone 6a, which has moved in the last several years to about mid-May. This is definitely going to save my Kale, broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower harvest this year!
Also, on a side note, I built a modified version of your tomato trellis to suit our beds this year (I pieced together raised beds from scrap pallet wood, old split fence rails, and other scrap wood I had laying around), and I ended up making use of a bunch of old thick wire T-post clips that we rarely use, but we always end up with whenever we buy T-posts, to make my own string spools to hang the line for the tomatoes on the trellis, and so far, it is working out AWESOME!!
I greatly appreciate your videos and information- your channel is a lifesaver! Keep up the great work!
I just got my BT going to spray tomorrow. That’s why my purple cabbage is untouched 🥬great video❤️❤️❤️
Every time I look at my kale I am depressed... two have been eaten away completely. One is surviving but only just ... today found two worms and took them off manually. I am now going to get this BT product. Thanks a lot for tips.
By the way I love your T-shirt! Once I get BT my 'matatas' will be over. I will be able to say "Hakuna Matata." :-)
Although I thought earwigs were making swiss cheese of my bok choy - I now am considering the simple cabbage worm as well! Thank you for this. I'll probably go with row covers or other netting on my containers.
Had some arugula under attack and tried the cornmeal method.... From all appearances it seems to have done the trick. Thanks alot!!
I've used tobacco spray for years and it is very effective if you start spraying the minute you see the signs.
Hi what is Tobacco spray ?
@@pamelamanns9384 Open up cigarettes - old or new, place them is warm (slightly hot) water and leave for a few days. Strain and spray.
There are so many other chemicals in most commercial cigarettes. You need to find pure untreated tobacco. It will probably affect the taste of the plants though. 🤮
I know when I see that Lion King tee I’m about to get the ultimate in garden content👏👏love your channel!
Dipel is a trade name for the BT product you recommend. It works great on tomato horn worm too
Awesome Info! Thanks Man. All I ever heard about was to use neem oil but this gives me options👍🏾
love seeing the process. I wonder sometimes if I'm doing it correctly and seeing this gave me the reassurance I need
thanks for those tips. my quote is grow two trees with one seed.
Brian, I enjoy and benefit from your weekly videos. Hoping with your help that next year will be better than last. Just an interesting footnote, the brassica family is quite a large family of plants and weeds, but many people do not realize that the vegetables we grow in the brassica family are mostly all just one plant, bred for different dominant traits. Probably developed by the monks in the Middle Ages, who didn't have much else to do except gardening. I learned this interesting fact in college biology, it can also be looked up on Wikipedia. BTW, I grew red cabbage, and did notice a few holes in some, but I will be proactive next year.
Brassica oleracea: kale, cabbage, collard greens, broccoli, cauliflower, kai-lan, Brussels sprouts, kohlrabi
I sure wished I’d seen this video when I planted my cabbage. My entire crop have been eaten up by the cabbage worms. I had no idea the little white butterfly was my garden enemy. I thought they were pollinators. Now, I know!!! Next year will be different. I have been able to harvest and salvage a few heads, but boy, them worms are relentless. Thank you for sharing your garden knowledge!
I use wood ash, sprinkle abundantly on the plants and repeat after rain.
Thanks for the excellent video. I use BT to control cabbage worms and other caterpillar type pests and you’re right it works great. The biggest problem I have with brassicas are aphids. I have to spray every two weeks religiously to control them. It seems like they go from zero to total infestation overnight.
Yes Sir. I definitely enjoyed the video. Can't wait to see you next weekend! Great info... as usual. 💘
Thanks, perfect timing....was just looking at the holes springing up
I started my fall crop of cabbage in my grow room in July & now its time to harden the off & get them planted in the outdoor garden.. . But man they're so perfect, I really hate to expose them to the insects!
However, with BT in hand, I'm ready for those critters!!
Thanks for the reminder 😎 it’s been raining on and off here in DE for the last couple weeks. We’ve finally got a clear week so I went out and sprayed my BT on all my brassicas. Hand picking gets tiring 😪
I'm a bit late for today's video but its better late than never.... I can't believe that I have just learned so much from you on how to get rid of cabbage worms, now I need to find some cornmeals!!!
Thank you. Now I can identify the moth. BTW, you can use BT in a pond for mosquito control. Its toxic to the larvae. Thats what is in those mosquito dunks that you can buy at Home Depot.
Good to know. Thanks!
Holly, great to know. I have two small fountains and use those mosquito dunks. (I originally thought I had tadpoles in the fountain until I realized it was mosquito larvae)🤣🤣🤣
Thanks - those dunks are expensive!
@@NextLevelGardening I have a question will bt wash off in the rain every time I spray bt not long after I spray bt on my plants the rain comes I have sprayed my plants 3 times so far.
Thank you for this info, my cabbage is being chewed up at record speed. I have ordered BT😊
I find if I leave the caterpillar squashed bodies on the plant the butterfly will not relay eggs on that plant. They either smell or see the dead ones and they seem to feel it is unsafe to lay more eggs there. I've been doing it for the past 2 years and have had very few problems. I can then keep on top of the worms without any sprays.
Thanks so much for this! I've been spending 10 minutes a day picking them off. BT will be much easier! I used your affiliate link. Thanks for your content!
Thanks Brother. Love your stuff. You get right to the point with your content.
I live in Barbados a tropical country and its very difficult for me to grow cabbage the worms always destroys them.my best to grow them is from october to late Febuary may.i try not to use pesticides but we don't get the natural things to us like BT but your videos are very informative thank you.
So there's a practical purpose for planting purple! Yes! I do because It's my favorite color, but that's what I'll tell people if they ask.
Great info, Brian! I had given up on many plants because of the worms. Now you’ve armed me for next year. The way time is flying, it will be time for starting seeds before I know it.
Thanks as always for your time and effort in sharing your wisdom. You are deeply appreciated!! Love and hugs to you, Emilie and Noah 🥰🤗❤️🥦🥦🥬🥬
Yes. It will be here before we know it! Thank you as always. ❤❤
I'm not growing brassicas yet but got info to know for when I try them.
Thabk you so much ive been looking at those little white butterflies flutter around my plants and just look at them adoringly because i had no idea what they were 😂😂😂 my cabbages are shredded up like a toddler with a hole puncher came along. Now i know thanks !
Imported Cabbageworms are nasty buggers. I'm wondering how many I've consumed this year in my kale salads since they are so camouflaged. Oh my. Love the videos keep them coming.
Great info! I always grow more than I need, but I can’t bring myself to offer a cabbage to neighbors that has been gnawed on. White butterflies are BAD news.
Wow, that butterfly not putting her green worm babies on red leaves, genious! Thanks for that!
If desperate enough, that moth/butterfly will lay on the purple leafed brassicas. Not fool proof!
With netting, I found it had to be kept away (ie on a frame) from the leaves. Those determined little critters will find a leaf touching the netting, and squirt their payload through the hole.
I have no idea why I have so many of the cabbage butterfly here, I am surrounded by grazing paddocks. This is my worst pest in the garden.
Years ago I considered a 410 shotgun to get the adults but my sensible wife talked me out of it.....
I have considered one of those salt guns that work for flies!
@@wolco003 great Christmas gift!
@@lynnwood2076 Totally! I bought a butterfly net for a 1/4 of the price.
😂😂😂
Wise wife!
Great info Brian! Thanks so much!
You're welcome
You have mentioned this BT before so I am now curious as to what kinds of pests does this work for besides the cabbage worms.
Also, thought you might like to know my broccoli and cauliflower are still doing very well. I'll do a garden update later today. And the herbs and lettuce I planted in the greenhouse have been thriving too!
Thats great! BT works on any leaf eating catapillar type worm.
@@NextLevelGardening - That's terrific! How about squash bugs? I had those at the end of the season this year and I am afraid they will be back again next year.
@@PaullaWells, use neem oil, insecticidal soap, or diatomaceous earth for squash bugs.
@@lauriesmith7517 - Thank you!
Wow! THANKYOU so much. Perfect timing. I'm so frustrated with these damn things!
You're welcome
Great info. I love bT, too.
What about using lemon?
The high ph would keep all small bugs away?
Also , Can you do a video about plants that work together?
Thank you! This was very helpful.
I have one cabbage plant. Bought it in a whim, and say the holes right away.
I then found 8 worms on that one plant!
I flicked them off, but I’m sure there are more.
Ima plants some sacrificial plants to try to save it. But if it doesn’t, I’m ok with it
I have badminton rackets everywhere for those white butterflies. I also put bowls of beer for the slugs. I need an organic spray that won't kill my good bugs.
Thank you so very much!!!
This awesome cheers, 99% of my cabbages and brocolli got decimated last year, the purple sprouting brocolli survived. I'm not even a massive fan of cabbage I just love how they look, I'll grow red cabbage only next year. 1 weird thing though, I pulled all my cabbages out of the ground and put them into pots to try to save them, they all got eaten except..... The ones I put next to a gooseberry Bush. No idea why.
I had these a few months ago and used D.E. and it worked pretty well, I think. Do the cabbage worms glow like tomato hornworms do under blacklight? Hunting hornworms was honestly the most fun I had in my garden all summer. I didn't think to check cabbage worms which popped up a few months after.
I’d be curious to know if you have tried that yet??
I tried and couldn't see any
So strange - I planted red cabbage this year along with green and to my surprise the red cabbage has had far more damage from white moths/worms than the green cabbage right next to them! And the green worms are just as hard to find.
Thanks for this video. What about getting rid of rolls pollues...my garden is overrun with them also.
I love ur channel i have lots of worms most of my plant's die
I thought the little white butterflies were a sign my garden was healthy and thriving.😢
Yes, very good video, thank you.
THANKS so much for the information.
Great Video! My guess is this will work for most other pest worms as well, like the armyworms on my tomatoes?
I bee happy after watching your video.
Your video very good information. Thank from indonesia
I want you give me spirit to my chanal Mr...
I finally ordered some BT off Amazon. I couldn't find it in any local stores.
HD and Lowe's usually sell it under brand name Thuricide. Dilute as directed but use dilution within a day or so - it doesn't keep.
Great tips!! Will neem oil work against cabbage worms?
Great tips thank you for sharing
Thank you. Perfect.
I've definitely found several worms/caterpillars on my red cabbages. 😬
I really like hitting butterflies with the fly zapper.
Camomile plants the white butterflies won’t go on it , I’ve seen them land on marigolds
I have around 14 different brassicas growing rn. I have 2 inedible cabbages (on accident).
They seem to really just go after the purple inedible cabbage.
thank god i just found you 🙏
Can you do a video on controlling mites attack on plants
Thanks for this. I had 1 cabbage that actually made it to my bed last year and it got murdered.
I am having wire worms in my garden which are spoiling my radishes and new seedlings. Can u please suggest any remedy
How the eggs go on the bottom of the leaf when butterflies lays them on the top ?
Good day, what do you recommend to use to kill mealy bugs? My tomates were looking great then BOOM, surprise.
GOOD GRIEF I HAVE THOSE UGLY THINGS. THANKS FOR THIS VIDEO!!!!!
Just bought more BT👍
Doesn’t BT hurt pollinators? Then how do my flowers get pollinated on cucumbers for instance?
So grateful
I noticed the cabbage worms didn't do the red cabbage. Now I get it.
Oh one great tone tip: search for these worms at night. They some times peek through the holes of the leaves that they ate
Thanks for the tips
I'm going to assume you're referring to BTi , and not BTh . I'm very careful where I use even these type controls including spinosad because my wife raises Monarchs and even though they don't eat cabbages the butterflies are attracted to the flowers. So I'll pollinate the female flowers on there first day opening with a male flower. twist tie the blossom closed and keep the male flowers mostly cut off. That and inject and spray the base with spinosade . That's a little more trouble but It keeps her happy and I'm to old to be doing the vegetable garden by myself. Thanks for confirming many of the same things I've been doing for over 40 years and giving me some interesting alternatives. I have a question wile I'm thinking about bugs, My first wife's uncle Used to collect any bugs that were bothering his truck garden then dry them out crush them add a fare amount of skim milk and let this ferment for maybe 10 days, run it through a screen and mix it with about 10 gallons of water and spray those affected plants. This seemed to work pretty darn well. This was over 35 years ago and I'm sure he's not around any more to ask. Do you have any idea what he was making?????
they damage tomatoes as.well correct? so it's safe on tomatoes cabbage pepper plants etc??
Great video, will BT work on rose slugs? Thank You
Hi is Bacillus Thuringiensis permitted to use in the U K by Amateur Gardeners
i searched for the caterpillars, but couldn't find any. Do the worms come out at night and feed?
I have a Question. I got the BT mentioned in the video. I sprayed my cabbage and brocolli completely. I noticed that a lot of it was beading up and runnung off the plants. Is this normal? Or am i missing something that helps it stick to the plants?
awesome advice :) thankyou xxx