I think only because I've been growing for so long, I've learned not to freak out. Like if I stress, it's not really going to solve anything really, right?
first time I saw mealy bugs, I went crazyyyyy with putting neem oil on my plants and boy did that stuff work wonders! Highly recommended for gnats + mealy bugs etc
@@shonaaitken7635 If it comes in a pure neem form (a small bottle usually), definitely dilute it w water and castile soap. If it's already in a spray form, you can use it right away.
Ive been fighting mealybugs for my plants in last few weeks using toothbrush to get rid of the bugs one by one and I was just thinking of you that how you can get rid of bugs and keep your plants so healthy and happy. It was perfect timing to find your video😊🍀 Thank you so much Summer Rayne !! From Japanese living in Perth, Australia.
I've been battling mealys in my small collection with an alcohol-soaked q-tip; keeps them down, if not out. You didn't mention that the beasts can hide at the base near the roots, under any bark bits on the top of the soil, and they *love* hanging out on the pot; for yours I would have checked under the lip and on the bottom of the pot. Also check where the pot was sitting, and in and around any saucer.
Waiting till your pothos is completely dry will help the horticultural spray stick better. It’s most likely to slide right off the leaves when wet and dilute the mixture
I check my plants daily. I currently have 2 with mealy bugs but I caught it early enough that I can stay on top of it with alcohol and q tips. I have 130 plants so come spring, I'm bringing in some lacewings. Super excited about it, to be honest.
@@jessa.4529 Yep! Bugs don't bother me. I have spiders and a Venus flytrap too so any that don't fly out the windows or doors will be dinner. I have no desire to spray my plants with chemicals.
@@Jameson77777 I didn't end up doing it but I actually found a lace wing in my house last summer. Apparently, they're common here in Colorado. Not watering my plants for almost 2 weeks killed all the fungus gnats. I've only had scale issues with seriously neglected plants (had a baby recently and haven't been paying attention). I did put one of my scale infested plants outside for the summer and nature took care of it because I brought it in yesterday and see none. Pretty sure some spiders took them out.
Oh my gosh. Thanks so much. Your timing is amazing. I lost 3 jades to mealybugs, partially because I thought it was a fungus and kept treating it with a baking soda/dishsoap solution. When I noticed the same white fuzz on my 3 year-old citrus tree I was panicking (it finally has two little fruits growing!). I used your treatment and I have hope to save it. Thanks again!!
I just came in with a small plant haul. I also propagated a straggly elephant rainbow bush cutting. I am so inspired seeing the inside of your home. Your videos challenged me to return to the limited cultivation of my love of plants in the now cold, dry Reno! All my beloveds will be indoor plants. Thank you, Summer.
I was trying to find out what was attacking a friend's grape leaves, mealy bugs (white patches) on the back, and corresponding bumps on the front of the leaves. I found your vlog, you're a lady after my own heart! I used to have many houseplants. I would also try Rosemary and/or Eucalyptus oils with dish soap with the Neem oil spray. That might lessen the strong aroma Neem oil has and your headaches? I commend you, great video, and keep on houseplanting :). Two issues I noticed: 1) You should NEVER compost diseased plant leaves, so as not to transfer the disease, bacterial or pest, back into the soil, then back to your plants! Burning the diseased plants is best. 2) Always wash your hands thoroughly after touching diseased leaves, again, so as not to transfer them to other plants. Just some of the things I've learned along the way :). Thanks Summer.
I remember seeing your apartment few years ago and fell in love,that was my goal for my apartment too... Now I have over 100 in a tiny apartment and I love it♥️ thank you for being an inspiration!
Thank you saw much for showing how these bugs look on plants and how you fight them. I love these close up videos that you have been making lately👍🏼 We get to see more of your amazing collection and learn how to care of our own plants. Thank you 🥰
I commend this video - it is a necessary topic to address for tropical/indoor/houseplants. However, I must advise as a past horticultural/greenhouse grower… it is the CRAWLERS or, rather, LARVAE state of mealybug that are most mobile and prone to spreading. When juvenile they are barely visible to the naked eye. So I strongly recommend that you wear gloves when handling mealybug infested plants and wash your hands afterwards. This is how they spread through pant collections, via our hands. Same advice goes for Scale. Side note: Mealybug have a slow lifespan, it takes months for a juvenile to reach maturity so it takes a while for you to notice an infestation. Only the males can fly when adult.
Thanks Danielle for sharing. And this is something I share about more extensively in the Houseplant Masterclass as well! www.houseplantmasterclass.com. The section on pests and IPM is extensive!
@@lorraineyanez4301 Not soapy enough. Don't spray. Get a very soapy sponge and put the plant in a sink/tub. Literally wash the plant with soap. Then wash the plant off. The mealy bug coating dissolves I think in soap. And then washing washes them down the drain as well.
This is 2 years old, but composting plants with pests isn't a good idea if you use the compost for your plants. They can lay eggs, and they can transfer
I had mealy bugs on my Pothos as well, they are so hard to eradicate because each leaf has small crevices in between where the leaf starts to grow and the vine. They also hide under the flaky wooden stem. Good Luck, I hope you can get ride of them.
I watched a video where a woman drowned them for 1/2 hr in water. It was a video showing them dead under water. Then one could rinse them off with a strong hose. A shower pick can turn pressure up or down on the nozzle. OMG you waited a couple of weeks. I would have worried about all those plants you have tons!!! I would have waited until the plant ;eaves were almost dry before using the spray.
Copenhagen, Denmark has a complete ban on all pesticide usage, so I have to laboriously sit with a magnifier and needle-tip dissection tweezers for hours on end nipping off pests. I just got a batch of Amorphophallus through today, and they had some mealy bugs. Went pretty well, I have to follow up on it every single day until they go dormant, though. Last year, I got orange greenhouse spider mites, and boy was that so much worse. Not to mention I had all my plants inside, so it really hit everything. The little egg deposits, the little red mites... just took foreeeeever, but being super thorough paid off. They didn’t settle on any other plants aside from my aroids, which went through seasonal dormancy and did not seem to get the spider mites when they shot a new leaf this year. Spider-mite free! Now hopefully I can get mealybug free ASAP! >
Watching you in the shower with the hose.. Oh Summer I have spent hours in that same position treating my plants. We do our best with what we have in apartments. ;) It actually is a bit of a work out! Sending healing vibes for your plants.
I have a beautiful monstera and it's suffered an outbreak of mealybugs recently. I was devastated! I started spraying it with a mix of gentle hand soap and neem oil hoping it would help. It's so heartening to see your video and know that you're using similar techniques!
Great. I am doing this on continued basis. Use Neem oil. After a week or two it keeps coming back in small numbers and I pick it up one by one. The fight against it is on. Thanks your episode.
I completely support using beneficial insects and use them outside all the time. I have watched a lot of your videos in regards to pest control but any tips for pest PREVENTION? I debate getting beneficial insects but if there's nothing for them they can eat (that I can see) they probably won't last. Would love any tips on pest PREVENTION.
All those stringy vines take away so much energy from the main plant. Most of those vines are missing leaves too. I myself would rather have a nice full healthy head on my plant with some shorter vines. It's so much easier to deal with if you do have a pest problem and the plant tends to looks much healthier. I'd cut some of those vines back propagate them and put them back into the plant after the pest problem is taken care of. Exactly it's just a tangled mess and really doesn't look that good. Just my opinion good luck hope you get rid of those nasty little bugs.
Summer, whenever it's possible, your best bet is to cut the plant right back to a few inches, then you only have to treat and quarantine a much smaller thing. Like the pothos, it will grow back in no time. It is almost impossible to reach all the nooks and crannies with so much leafage area. Not sure if the oil-based sprays kill their eggs, but they might...... From your shower, being so close to the plants behind you, you really might splash eggs back onto them. Mealybugs are a complete nightmare, and it is not worth taking any prisoners!
Karsten T did you just mansplain treating mealybugs to a scientist with 800+ plants? 😅 she says in the video she’s bringing in predator bugs to finish the job. This is to slow their progress in the meantime.
@@PamsPrettyPlants I've been growing all sorts of plants for more than 40 years. I've had mealybug a coupla times, once on a Ficus benjamina. I tried to get rid of them for 9 months. This time I failed, and the fig just died 😥. Their eggs are microscopic and impenetrable to pesticides, and they can hatch out after quite a while, especially in low temps. I have no tolerance for them at all!
It might come to that, but in the springtime, I often bring in IPM and then that seems to get everything to a really manageable level. We'll see if it works this time!
@@summerrayneoakes Ok, I hope it works. I've done a bit more research, conversing with a great botanist friend I have. He said he used an oil-based spray (Bug Clear Fruit & Veg) and it killed mite eggs (in this case, Brevipalpus). So maybe oil-based sprays can actually suffocate mealybug eggs? (Also I just edited what I wrote! 👆)
We've had pest in our backyard greenhouse too. Mealy bugs at first but now thrips. Thrips LOVE Vandas in bloom. We've tried all the poisons and such. A person recommended this all natural stuff called Garlic barrier. Works well but holy Jesus, the smell of garlic and onion gets on you and burns your eyes like crazy. I bet you can still smell it on me.
I've had success with hydrogen peroxide on a q tip for really small outbreaks. Idk if that's really the right intervention but it works pretty well and is non-toxic!
Sometimes you bring the eggs straight from the nursery, I think. But yes, if you see a lot of ants, look for various pests, they're all good friends... :/
I am right there with you! I remove the soil that my plants come in imeedidiately upon arrival, bc I heard that pests can live/hide in the soil. My collection increased by 300 last year (I sell them at the farmers market), and although I thought I did a good job inspecting my plants &removing the soil, I must've missed some bc I have had a few mealy bug outbreaks this winter. Zero spring through fall, but during the height of winter &the dry conditions in my house &poof! They appeared seemingly out of nowhere.
@@punKRaWKgrL333 wow, that's so weird!! Mealy bugs thrive in humid and warm conditions, I should know, last summer was almost a tropical one here in Greece (way too humid than average) and the nurseries sold more pesticides than plants!! I also have more than 300 plants and I was so frustrated and struggling to deal with various pests all summer long and lost quite a few plants too... We've had a nasty winter though and I haven't seen any since November I think...
@@valiumk.9489 I'm sorry you lost some of your plants. 😧 I know how frustrating & even sad that can be! If I have duplicates or it's an annual it is not as bad, as if it is sentimental, hard to find/expensive, or you have just one in your collection. Those seem to be the ones I lose, especially if they require different care than the majority. I don't know if maybe different types of mealybugs have slightly different habits? I heard there are quite a few different species that all but scientists are able to distinguish apart... So maybe that? Maybe the common mealybugs in your country prefer humidity, while the ones near me prefer dry conditions? Just a guess ..bc I had been buying new plants every week or two from spring until mid-November, &I didn't see any pests, nor signs of them at all, until mid-January. We had quite a rainy &humid summer/fall, whereas my house has been increasingly, painfully, painfully dry (inside my home) as the winter has progressed bc the heater has been running near constantly. Sorry for the extremely long comment!!
Another awesome video! Been struggling with mealybugs as well on my BOP. I'm trying out horticultural soap and castile soap this next week. I also wanted to thank you for showing FAIRCHILD in your past videos, just went out to their orchid exhibition this weekend, and my jaw dropped. I especially loved seeing their aroids in their enclosed spaces.
Glad you enjoyed those past videos. Still got to get back there to shoot a more pro video with them! I had to do the shoot all myself and that's so tough when all I want to do is look and touch the plants!
I’m fighting a mealy bug battle on my Meyer lemon. It’s inside for the winter under grow lights. I lost my key lime to these damn things. I’m obsessed with killing these things. Every morning I look and use rubbing alcohol on any of those little buggers. Pain in the butt for sure
Hello Summer, apparently you can make a tincture from toothache plant which I know you have in your allotment, seen it in one of your videos...You spray it on the plant as a natural insecticide. I havnt tried it myself yet but will be trying it out this summer season ... I get a huge aphid problem in my herb garden. If you have tried it before please let me know if its any good? Best wishes from Northern Ireland x
ok Summer, big fan and love learning from you. I am having my very first pest of any kind and it is mealy bugs. I am struggling though. I do not have very many but they destroyed my string of bananas, turtles, and wandering jew. I saved the turtles and the jew is possibly ruined from treating it. They are so fragile and cant handle getting their leaves wet. My question is this, I have used neem oil as preventative but, I still ended up with them. I have been treating for over two weeks now and I still have to continue. How can I KNOW they are gone on y more full plants like my china doll tree? There are just sooo many leaves. Should I be concerned about rot mealy bugs? I keep finding one or two after each week, kill them and wait some more. HELP!
Hey Summer, you said you will put the infected leaves in compost. I wanted to know is it safe to put such leaves in compost? Also, would love it, if you could do a video on your composting!
Hi summer. Im trying to tackle a mealy bug infestation on my areca palm and a dracaena. It came from an aloevera i got from the suoermarket. . neem oil gives me a headache too. My mom suggested mustard oil. I dunno how effective it is. But if it works I'll def post about it.
Sb plant invigorator breaks down the bugs waxy coating. The next day a good shower to knock them off. Bonus is that the Sb plant invigorator if a foliage feed (also suitable for orchids)
I will have to watch another video on how to deal with these freaky bugs these are my 1st ever pest that I was hoping would never happen but just out of the blue BAM 😱😱😱 they are all over my lemon-lime maranta 😭😭
i got mealybugs from a plant i got from lowes. i dont have curtains so I use plants as a sorta curtain for my window in my bedroom garden. All the plants at the window are in close contact so I've noticed mealbugs on all my window plants and nowhere else in the room. Can you make a video, or just respond indepthly, about bringing in bugs. What are the bugs supposed to do? do they eat the mealy bugs? How do I get rid of the bugs after? I have so many questions. If you can remember all the questions you had when it was your first time dealing with this, if you could answer them i'd appreciate it. thank you
After watching this, i have this gut feeling that my plants might have it. And behold! There's no Mealybugs, but SPIDERMITES! All of my Alocasia have them and since it's already midnight here, i will be hosing them down first thing in the morning.
I have battled spider mites for years and done so much research and experimentation. Let me give you the ONLY thing that works: a mixture of baby oil (mineral oil, sold for babies), a drop of dish soap, and water. The ratio is 2% baby oil to 98% water. Shake shake shake, they spray in a fine mist onto dry, clean, dust free plants. Leave it on to dry. The spider mites will never come back. The only plant this has affected negatively is my pachira aquatica, it loses its leaves if I spray this on. It is the only plant of mine that has spider mites out of ~400 houseplants. I spray them with this about twice a year. I'm really passionate about spider mite treatment lol. I hope this helps.
can u pls pls do a video about some of the common diseases peperomia contracts and how to deal with them? my peperomia obtusifolia has brown spots on them and its spreading...
Hi Summer, I have a lavender plant that I keep indoors that has aphids, and spraying with isopropyl/neem oil hasn't helped a lot. There are springtails in the soil too! Should I just get rid of it?
I just noticed some very tiny white fuzzy specs on two of my plants, and maybe my wooly thyme, but they don’t look like those bugs. I’m so confused. Please help!!
I just found mealybugs on my Strelitzia Reginae and I'm freaking out. It's in a heavy pot, so I can't move it to the shower. I moved my other plants away from the corner it's in and sprayed it with some eco-friendly spray. Hopefully they will be gone soon. 😢
Ugh I hate pests!!!!! Mealy bugs are so nasty, I had a huge outbreak of those the previous summer in my balcony plants and I've actually lost a few plants. >.
Thank you, thank you, thank you 🙏🙏🙏 I noticed these on my Red Leaf Cordyline today, I’d be devastated if those rascally mealybugs made their way to my Tillandsia cyanea!
😱 I would go mad, with not having infested the rest of the plants. As I am now! But mine don't really touch eachother like yours. I bought 4 plants from someone & big huge mistake that was. They had bugs & infected the rest of my plants. I can't get rid of these damn things. 2 full plants died :( Corn dragon,) I used cotton ball with alcohol did work but then came back. I think they were in the crevices like u explain. Where do I buy that spray?
Hello Summer, love the video! I believe the second plant you identified as neon Philodendron 9:30 is technically an Epipremnum (pothos). I have a Philodendron hederaceum (lemon-lime), as well as a neon pothos. Both very similar in outward appearance ;) Thank you tremendously for all the forms of edutainment your videos provide, never stop!
Summer you have got to be thee most to plant person I know( well see). Everything is so true. ! The way we see them and don't deal with them right away.. That's life😌 taking a shower with our plants Bc we want to rid of these little f----ers(oops ) can't say enough thanks. Letty....
My 6 yo Jade had quite a bad infection of mealy bugs. I’ve used Neem, with success, systemic stuff, w success, and this last time alcohol, dawn and H2O. All the leaves have fallen off. And they are back AGAIN! Any suggestions?
Were you able to completely eradicate the mealy bugs from the pothos? In prior infestations, I did everything that you did but the mealy bugs would eventually come back because they just aren't in the plant, but they are also on the soil, and I suspect the soil itself. The only way I have been able to get rid of mealy bugs completely was through a systemic pesticide.
Glad you came by! I do have to say a woman by the name of Abby b from VA won the Aglaonema and Houseplant Masterclass though :) -but I'll have more giveaways in the near future!
I have a problem with gnats, I've tried everything (besides buying another bug to release to eat them). I've tried neem oil, dish soap, gnat traps, peroxide, chemical insect sprays, soaking my plants, and apple cider traps and I can get it somewhat under control but not gone. What else should I try? I'm trying not to water my plants to much, and tried putting a layer of sand on the top soil too.
I am amazed and encouraged by the dedication here! For the average houseplant grower, if you can part ways with your precious infested plant, though, I recommend you do! Mealys are so virulent, and persistent, and once they appear are practically impossible to completely eliminate. They can hide anywhere - stems, leaves, roots, even the soil or under rocks. They’ll always be waiting.. dormant, and invisible. They can even survive the harshest insecticides. Prevent, prevent, prevent. And if you see them ... Run while you can!
hey Summer! i absolutely love watching your videos and have been doing so for the past year that i've known about your channel. considering the content of this video- i might just have to give up on my marble queen pothos :(. i bought it from a local plant store and after bringing it home, realized that it had a bad mealybug infestation... anyway, i love your yoga outfit in this video! if you ever see this, i'd like to know where you got your super cool top from!
I would panic. I lost half of my sizable collection in college to spider mites. Any sort of pests drive me crazy. Major kudos to you for being so calm and methodical in taking care of this!
How are you soo calm with so many amazing plants at risk?!?!? 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 I would be going crazy.
I think only because I've been growing for so long, I've learned not to freak out. Like if I stress, it's not really going to solve anything really, right?
It prob because off the yoga! :P
You don’t want the plants feeling those stressed out vibes 😋
@@summerrayneoakes I love your attitude!
first time I saw mealy bugs, I went crazyyyyy with putting neem oil on my plants and boy did that stuff work wonders! Highly recommended for gnats + mealy bugs etc
I apply neem oil every month to my plants. Bonus.. it smells pretty good 😁
@@HookedOnTXMusic Do you just spray it directly on them at 100% or do you dilute it? I found mealey bugs today and freaked out immediately.
@@shonaaitken7635 If it comes in a pure neem form (a small bottle usually), definitely dilute it w water and castile soap. If it's already in a spray form, you can use it right away.
@@vanessanguyen95 Thank you. I did it incorrectly and wiped it on full strength 😬 I'll know for next time though.
Yeah, but it smells terrible.
Ive been fighting mealybugs for my plants in last few weeks using toothbrush to get rid of the bugs one by one and I was just thinking of you that how you can get rid of bugs and keep your plants so healthy and happy. It was perfect timing to find your video😊🍀 Thank you so much Summer Rayne !! From Japanese living in Perth, Australia.
Glad it may help some!
I've been battling mealys in my small collection with an alcohol-soaked q-tip; keeps them down, if not out. You didn't mention that the beasts can hide at the base near the roots, under any bark bits on the top of the soil, and they *love* hanging out on the pot; for yours I would have checked under the lip and on the bottom of the pot. Also check where the pot was sitting, and in and around any saucer.
I command you for touching them with your hands. A hazmat suit will do for me
Them mealybugs messed with the wrong woman! 👊👩
Waiting till your pothos is completely dry will help the horticultural spray stick better. It’s most likely to slide right off the leaves when wet and dilute the mixture
Thanks for the tips!
I’m new to house plants. I got a pothos yesterday and if I EVER find those buggers, I’m coming straight to this video. Thank you!!
That is my worst nightmare 😩😩😩😩,I get anxiety jus thinking about those evil pest !!
This is one of my favorite videos of yours to watch even though it's about mealy bugs the video is calming for me
Your camera game and editing is top notch amazing!!!!! What a pleasure to watch!!!!
I check my plants daily. I currently have 2 with mealy bugs but I caught it early enough that I can stay on top of it with alcohol and q tips. I have 130 plants so come spring, I'm bringing in some lacewings. Super excited about it, to be honest.
Glad you're getting onto the lacewing kick!
Wait into your house?
@@jessa.4529 Yep! Bugs don't bother me. I have spiders and a Venus flytrap too so any that don't fly out the windows or doors will be dinner. I have no desire to spray my plants with chemicals.
How that work out? I was considering lace wings until I read they can & do bite humans. 😬
@@Jameson77777 I didn't end up doing it but I actually found a lace wing in my house last summer. Apparently, they're common here in Colorado. Not watering my plants for almost 2 weeks killed all the fungus gnats. I've only had scale issues with seriously neglected plants (had a baby recently and haven't been paying attention). I did put one of my scale infested plants outside for the summer and nature took care of it because I brought it in yesterday and see none. Pretty sure some spiders took them out.
Oh my gosh. Thanks so much. Your timing is amazing. I lost 3 jades to mealybugs, partially because I thought it was a fungus and kept treating it with a baking soda/dishsoap solution. When I noticed the same white fuzz on my 3 year-old citrus tree I was panicking (it finally has two little fruits growing!). I used your treatment and I have hope to save it. Thanks again!!
good luck with it Melissa! It's a battle!
I just came in with a small plant haul. I also propagated a straggly elephant rainbow bush cutting. I am so inspired seeing the inside of your home. Your videos challenged me to return to the limited cultivation of my love of plants in the now cold, dry Reno! All my beloveds will be indoor plants. Thank you, Summer.
Nice strategies. I use a spray of isopropyl alcohol, and quarantine.
Same. I have mostly succulents, so am afraid of the effects of hort/neem oil on thier beautiful leaves.
I was trying to find out what was attacking a friend's grape leaves, mealy bugs (white patches) on the back, and corresponding bumps on the front of the leaves. I found your vlog, you're a lady after my own heart! I used to have many houseplants. I would also try Rosemary and/or Eucalyptus oils with dish soap with the Neem oil spray. That might lessen the strong aroma Neem oil has and your headaches? I commend you, great video, and keep on houseplanting :). Two issues I noticed: 1) You should NEVER compost diseased plant leaves, so as not to transfer the disease, bacterial or pest, back into the soil, then back to your plants! Burning the diseased plants is best. 2) Always wash your hands thoroughly after touching diseased leaves, again, so as not to transfer them to other plants. Just some of the things I've learned along the way :). Thanks Summer.
I have taken on the Summer Rayne Zen approach to bugs. I found spider mite webs on a recent plant buy and did not cry OR drink. 🙏🏻
I remember seeing your apartment few years ago and fell in love,that was my goal for my apartment too...
Now I have over 100 in a tiny apartment and I love it♥️ thank you for being an inspiration!
Glad to help fuel the inspo!
for schefflera and dieffenbachia a good solution is defoliating to actually clean them all out, followed by horticultural oil and pesticide
Yet another inspiring video 😍✌👌 thank you Summer 😀
Thank you saw much for showing how these bugs look on plants and how you fight them. I love these close up videos that you have been making lately👍🏼 We get to see more of your amazing collection and learn how to care of our own plants. Thank you 🥰
You're mighty welcome. Glad you're enjoying.
Neem oil gives me a headache too. So, I am glad that there are other natural treatments!
I commend this video - it is a necessary topic to address for tropical/indoor/houseplants.
However, I must advise as a past horticultural/greenhouse grower… it is the CRAWLERS or, rather, LARVAE state of mealybug that are most mobile and prone to spreading. When juvenile they are barely visible to the naked eye. So I strongly recommend that you wear gloves when handling mealybug infested plants and wash your hands afterwards. This is how they spread through pant collections, via our hands.
Same advice goes for Scale.
Side note: Mealybug have a slow lifespan, it takes months for a juvenile to reach maturity so it takes a while for you to notice an infestation. Only the males can fly when adult.
Thanks Danielle for sharing. And this is something I share about more extensively in the Houseplant Masterclass as well! www.houseplantmasterclass.com. The section on pests and IPM is extensive!
I use Dawn soap solution in spray bottle, prior to wash down, my shower has a hose attachment that works fine, keep up the good work, lol.
i ve been doing the soapy water spraying but they keep coming back
@@lorraineyanez4301 Not soapy enough. Don't spray. Get a very soapy sponge and put the plant in a sink/tub. Literally wash the plant with soap. Then wash the plant off. The mealy bug coating dissolves I think in soap. And then washing washes them down the drain as well.
I love your new vlogs!! Thank you for showing the reality of how your day really goes to make the beauty "happen" .
Glad you're enjoying.
O wow.. just wow.. thank you for showing this.
This is 2 years old, but composting plants with pests isn't a good idea if you use the compost for your plants. They can lay eggs, and they can transfer
I had mealy bugs on my Pothos as well, they are so hard to eradicate because each leaf has small crevices in between where the leaf starts to grow and the vine. They also hide under the flaky wooden stem. Good Luck, I hope you can get ride of them.
Thanks! I have been monitoring this one. And have moved on to caring for my next one too!
Thanks for showing us how you deal with the issue in a real situation. If it can happen to you ....
I watched a video where a woman drowned them for 1/2 hr in water. It was a video showing them dead under water. Then one could rinse them off with a strong hose. A shower pick can turn pressure up or down on the nozzle. OMG you waited a couple of weeks. I would have worried about all those plants you have tons!!! I would have waited until the plant ;eaves were almost dry before using the spray.
Copenhagen, Denmark has a complete ban on all pesticide usage, so I have to laboriously sit with a magnifier and needle-tip dissection tweezers for hours on end nipping off pests.
I just got a batch of Amorphophallus through today, and they had some mealy bugs. Went pretty well, I have to follow up on it every single day until they go dormant, though.
Last year, I got orange greenhouse spider mites, and boy was that so much worse. Not to mention I had all my plants inside, so it really hit everything. The little egg deposits, the little red mites... just took foreeeeever, but being super thorough paid off.
They didn’t settle on any other plants aside from my aroids, which went through seasonal dormancy and did not seem to get the spider mites when they shot a new leaf this year.
Spider-mite free! Now hopefully I can get mealybug free ASAP! >
Watching you in the shower with the hose.. Oh Summer I have spent hours in that same position treating my plants. We do our best with what we have in apartments. ;) It actually is a bit of a work out! Sending healing vibes for your plants.
Thanks my dear! Glad you can relate.
I have a beautiful monstera and it's suffered an outbreak of mealybugs recently. I was devastated! I started spraying it with a mix of gentle hand soap and neem oil hoping it would help. It's so heartening to see your video and know that you're using similar techniques!
Hope yours comes out OK!
Great. I am doing this on continued basis. Use Neem oil. After a week or two it keeps coming back in small numbers and I pick it up one by one. The fight against it is on. Thanks your episode.
Hi . I'm Saad from Saudi Arabia. I wish you success and success in your whole life, Lord
I completely support using beneficial insects and use them outside all the time. I have watched a lot of your videos in regards to pest control but any tips for pest PREVENTION? I debate getting beneficial insects but if there's nothing for them they can eat (that I can see) they probably won't last. Would love any tips on pest PREVENTION.
great shots of those pesky mealy bugs
All those stringy vines take away so much energy from the main plant. Most of those vines are missing leaves too. I myself would rather have a nice full healthy head on my plant with some shorter vines. It's so much easier to deal with if you do have a pest problem and the plant tends to looks much healthier. I'd cut some of those vines back propagate them and put them back into the plant after the pest problem is taken care of. Exactly it's just a tangled mess and really doesn't look that good. Just my opinion good luck hope you get rid of those nasty little bugs.
This video was just on time, thank you for the tips!
you're welcome!
Summer, whenever it's possible, your best bet is to cut the plant right back to a few inches, then you only have to treat and quarantine a much smaller thing. Like the pothos, it will grow back in no time. It is almost impossible to reach all the nooks and crannies with so much leafage area. Not sure if the oil-based sprays kill their eggs, but they might......
From your shower, being so close to the plants behind you, you really might splash eggs back onto them.
Mealybugs are a complete nightmare, and it is not worth taking any prisoners!
Karsten T did you just mansplain treating mealybugs to a scientist with 800+ plants? 😅 she says in the video she’s bringing in predator bugs to finish the job. This is to slow their progress in the meantime.
@@PamsPrettyPlants I've been growing all sorts of plants for more than 40 years. I've had mealybug a coupla times, once on a Ficus benjamina. I tried to get rid of them for 9 months. This time I failed, and the fig just died 😥. Their eggs are microscopic and impenetrable to pesticides, and they can hatch out after quite a while, especially in low temps.
I have no tolerance for them at all!
@@PamsPrettyPlants I agree with you but I wouldn't call it "mansplaining". That's just going to cause unwanted conflict.
It might come to that, but in the springtime, I often bring in IPM and then that seems to get everything to a really manageable level. We'll see if it works this time!
@@summerrayneoakes Ok, I hope it works. I've done a bit more research, conversing with a great botanist friend I have. He said he used an oil-based spray (Bug Clear Fruit & Veg) and it killed mite eggs (in this case, Brevipalpus). So maybe oil-based sprays can actually suffocate mealybug eggs? (Also I just edited what I wrote! 👆)
We've had pest in our backyard greenhouse too. Mealy bugs at first but now thrips. Thrips LOVE Vandas in bloom. We've tried all the poisons and such. A person recommended this all natural stuff called Garlic barrier. Works well but holy Jesus, the smell of garlic and onion gets on you and burns your eyes like crazy. I bet you can still smell it on me.
Very good video
I've had success with hydrogen peroxide on a q tip for really small outbreaks. Idk if that's really the right intervention but it works pretty well and is non-toxic!
Works for sure if you have a small plant!
I HATE mealy bugs and scale. One thing I've never understood is how the heck those pests even get into my house.
Sometimes you bring the eggs straight from the nursery, I think. But yes, if you see a lot of ants, look for various pests, they're all good friends... :/
I am right there with you! I remove the soil that my plants come in imeedidiately upon arrival, bc I heard that pests can live/hide in the soil. My collection increased by 300 last year (I sell them at the farmers market), and although I thought I did a good job inspecting my plants &removing the soil, I must've missed some bc I have had a few mealy bug outbreaks this winter. Zero spring through fall, but during the height of winter &the dry conditions in my house &poof! They appeared seemingly out of nowhere.
@@blackdogultra haha, yeah if you have ANY space left to isolate them, it's great... oh my, I need a bigger home... :p
@@punKRaWKgrL333 wow, that's so weird!! Mealy bugs thrive in humid and warm conditions, I should know, last summer was almost a tropical one here in Greece (way too humid than average) and the nurseries sold more pesticides than plants!! I also have more than 300 plants and I was so frustrated and struggling to deal with various pests all summer long and lost quite a few plants too... We've had a nasty winter though and I haven't seen any since November I think...
@@valiumk.9489 I'm sorry you lost some of your plants. 😧 I know how frustrating & even sad that can be! If I have duplicates or it's an annual it is not as bad, as if it is sentimental, hard to find/expensive, or you have just one in your collection. Those seem to be the ones I lose, especially if they require different care than the majority.
I don't know if maybe different types of mealybugs have slightly different habits? I heard there are quite a few different species that all but scientists are able to distinguish apart... So maybe that? Maybe the common mealybugs in your country prefer humidity, while the ones near me prefer dry conditions? Just a guess ..bc I had been buying new plants every week or two from spring until mid-November, &I didn't see any pests, nor signs of them at all, until mid-January. We had quite a rainy &humid summer/fall, whereas my house has been increasingly, painfully, painfully dry (inside my home) as the winter has progressed bc the heater has been running near constantly.
Sorry for the extremely long comment!!
Another awesome video! Been struggling with mealybugs as well on my BOP. I'm trying out horticultural soap and castile soap this next week. I also wanted to thank you for showing FAIRCHILD in your past videos, just went out to their orchid exhibition this weekend, and my jaw dropped. I especially loved seeing their aroids in their enclosed spaces.
Glad you enjoyed those past videos. Still got to get back there to shoot a more pro video with them! I had to do the shoot all myself and that's so tough when all I want to do is look and touch the plants!
🎶There's a hose in this house
Wet ass pothos
Make that mealybugs weak!
I’m fighting a mealy bug battle on my Meyer lemon. It’s inside for the winter under grow lights. I lost my key lime to these damn things. I’m obsessed with killing these things. Every morning I look and use rubbing alcohol on any of those little buggers. Pain in the butt for sure
I had to toss two of my favorite pothos because of mealy bugs. They’re such a pain to get rid of!
Hello Summer, apparently you can make a tincture from toothache plant which I know you have in your allotment, seen it in one of your videos...You spray it on the plant as a natural insecticide. I havnt tried it myself yet but will be trying it out this summer season ... I get a huge aphid problem in my herb garden. If you have tried it before please let me know if its any good? Best wishes from Northern Ireland x
ok Summer, big fan and love learning from you. I am having my very first pest of any kind and it is mealy bugs. I am struggling though. I do not have very many but they destroyed my string of bananas, turtles, and wandering jew. I saved the turtles and the jew is possibly ruined from treating it. They are so fragile and cant handle getting their leaves wet. My question is this, I have used neem oil as preventative but, I still ended up with them. I have been treating for over two weeks now and I still have to continue. How can I KNOW they are gone on y more full plants like my china doll tree? There are just sooo many leaves. Should I be concerned about rot mealy bugs? I keep finding one or two after each week, kill them and wait some more. HELP!
Hey Summer, you said you will put the infected leaves in compost. I wanted to know is it safe to put such leaves in compost? Also, would love it, if you could do a video on your composting!
I once found a mealy big on a hedera helix of mine. I searched and searched and only found the one. So I plucked it off and I’ve never seen one since.
you did some good searching!
I hate those hungry wooly balls :/ Love the title❤️👍🙌🏻
NEVER SEEN THEM THAT CLOSE UP....YIKES 😱LOL SMH! Thanks for the tips SUMMER👍🏼
Omg I would go so crazy. I found mealy bugs on a pothos too
I have been battling mealy bugs on Jade for about 6 months. Got tired of it and got some diatomacous earth. I have not seen them since!
David Lakers how did you use diatomaceous earth ? Did you just top the soil with it ?
I have a constant mealybug crisis here and I do the same. And also neem oil gives me a headache. It's a ongoing war!
Have you ever though of soaking the plants in a large pail, and let them drown? What are the risk of doing this method?
Hi summer. Im trying to tackle a mealy bug infestation on my areca palm and a dracaena. It came from an aloevera i got from the suoermarket. . neem oil gives me a headache too. My mom suggested mustard oil. I dunno how effective it is. But if it works I'll def post about it.
Sb plant invigorator breaks down the bugs waxy coating. The next day a good shower to knock them off. Bonus is that the Sb plant invigorator if a foliage feed (also suitable for orchids)
Good tip!
Can this be purchased in the US? I couldn't find it when I googled it except in the UK. Thank you!
i`ve lost a few plants to these nasty mealybugs!!! thanks for the tip!
You're mighty welcome!
I go into hysterics if I see even a single mealy bug.
I will have to watch another video on how to deal with these freaky bugs these are my 1st ever pest that I was hoping would never happen but just out of the blue BAM 😱😱😱 they are all over my lemon-lime maranta 😭😭
Hi there! I’m curious how your pothos did long term after this. Hoping it’s still thriving.
i got mealybugs from a plant i got from lowes. i dont have curtains so I use plants as a sorta curtain for my window in my bedroom garden. All the plants at the window are in close contact so I've noticed mealbugs on all my window plants and nowhere else in the room. Can you make a video, or just respond indepthly, about bringing in bugs. What are the bugs supposed to do? do they eat the mealy bugs? How do I get rid of the bugs after? I have so many questions. If you can remember all the questions you had when it was your first time dealing with this, if you could answer them i'd appreciate it. thank you
love your energy love your plants but a 150 ft water hose in your house forget about mealy bugs and keep an eye out for termites
After watching this, i have this gut feeling that my plants might have it. And behold! There's no Mealybugs, but SPIDERMITES! All of my Alocasia have them and since it's already midnight here, i will be hosing them down first thing in the morning.
I find Alocasia SUPER PRONE to spider mites. Good luck!
I have battled spider mites for years and done so much research and experimentation. Let me give you the ONLY thing that works: a mixture of baby oil (mineral oil, sold for babies), a drop of dish soap, and water. The ratio is 2% baby oil to 98% water. Shake shake shake, they spray in a fine mist onto dry, clean, dust free plants. Leave it on to dry. The spider mites will never come back. The only plant this has affected negatively is my pachira aquatica, it loses its leaves if I spray this on. It is the only plant of mine that has spider mites out of ~400 houseplants. I spray them with this about twice a year.
I'm really passionate about spider mite treatment lol. I hope this helps.
Vaseline
can u pls pls do a video about some of the common diseases peperomia contracts and how to deal with them?
my peperomia obtusifolia has brown spots on them and its spreading...
Hi Summer,
I have a lavender plant that I keep indoors that has aphids, and spraying with isopropyl/neem oil hasn't helped a lot. There are springtails in the soil too! Should I just get rid of it?
I'm wondering how did you attach the plant to the wall? Do you have a video about this topic as well? :)
How do the bugs get inside, I’m not familiar with indoor gardening, I do outdoor crops
I just noticed some very tiny white fuzzy specs on two of my plants, and maybe my wooly thyme, but they don’t look like those bugs. I’m so confused. Please help!!
I just found mealybugs on my Strelitzia Reginae and I'm freaking out. It's in a heavy pot, so I can't move it to the shower. I moved my other plants away from the corner it's in and sprayed it with some eco-friendly spray. Hopefully they will be gone soon. 😢
Ohhh those mealy bugs! I used rubbing alcohol for my succulents. Ill try hosing them too next time.. thanks for the tip!
I really only used the hose because my plant was so big! You might find it easier to pluck em off your succulent!
@@summerrayneoakes fan girling now. Cant believe you take time to reply..... love all that you do Summer!
Ugh I hate pests!!!!! Mealy bugs are so nasty, I had a huge outbreak of those the previous summer in my balcony plants and I've actually lost a few plants. >.
Thank you, thank you, thank you 🙏🙏🙏 I noticed these on my Red Leaf Cordyline today, I’d be devastated if those rascally mealybugs made their way to my Tillandsia cyanea!
😱 I would go mad, with not having infested the rest of the plants. As I am now! But mine don't really touch eachother like yours. I bought 4 plants from someone & big huge mistake that was. They had bugs & infected the rest of my plants. I can't get rid of these damn things. 2 full plants died :( Corn dragon,) I used cotton ball with alcohol did work but then came back. I think they were in the crevices like u explain. Where do I buy that spray?
Hello Summer, love the video!
I believe the second plant you identified as neon Philodendron 9:30 is technically an Epipremnum (pothos).
I have a Philodendron hederaceum (lemon-lime), as well as a neon pothos. Both very similar in outward appearance ;)
Thank you tremendously for all the forms of edutainment your videos provide, never stop!
MakerMike: I second this notion
You're totally right! I have both Philo and Epi Neon and I always flub them. Thanks for correcting!
@@summerrayneoakes There was never a doubt it was anything more than an oversight ;)
Thanks for the great info Summer.
The croton living in my son's room is infested by these white walkers. I thought I've eradicated them using isopropyl alcohol but some survived...
Hard to eliminate
Summer you have got to be thee most to plant person I know( well see). Everything is so true. ! The way we see them and don't deal with them right away.. That's life😌 taking a shower with our plants Bc we want to rid of these little f----ers(oops ) can't say enough thanks. Letty....
My 6 yo Jade had quite a bad infection of mealy bugs. I’ve used Neem, with success, systemic stuff, w success, and this last time alcohol, dawn and H2O. All the leaves have fallen off. And they are back AGAIN!
Any suggestions?
Were you able to completely eradicate the mealy bugs from the pothos? In prior infestations, I did everything that you did but the mealy bugs would eventually come back because they just aren't in the plant, but they are also on the soil, and I suspect the soil itself. The only way I have been able to get rid of mealy bugs completely was through a systemic pesticide.
Robert Hemedes what brand pesticide did you use ?
Hello! You were the very first plant addict that started my own addiction! I’m hoping to win the giveaway of the aglaonema! Much love! ❤️❤️❤️
Glad you came by! I do have to say a woman by the name of Abby b from VA won the Aglaonema and Houseplant Masterclass though :) -but I'll have more giveaways in the near future!
I guarantee that pothos was never completely free of mealybugs again. Those things are absolutely unstoppable once they get that far along.
i got my first mealy outbreak today on a few big plants and sprayed water on them then soap water, then 50 percent rubbing alcohol. will this work?
Hi Summer, I’m a new visitor to your site. I have a question, why are the tips of some of my plants turnIng brown?
I have a problem with gnats, I've tried everything (besides buying another bug to release to eat them). I've tried neem oil, dish soap, gnat traps, peroxide, chemical insect sprays, soaking my plants, and apple cider traps and I can get it somewhat under control but not gone. What else should I try? I'm trying not to water my plants to much, and tried putting a layer of sand on the top soil too.
Episode 15. ua-cam.com/video/SnZiLZrK-lk/v-deo.html
Me: has 1 plant, gets spider mites.
Sunmer Rayne Oakes Willow Branch Tree: has 500 billion plants, only one has mealy bugs because she is a goddess
Haha. Not true. Plant pests are just part of the ride !
can you drown them by submersing the entire plant in soapy water?
dealing with this now....they are winning
I am amazed and encouraged by the dedication here! For the average houseplant grower, if you can part ways with your precious infested plant, though, I recommend you do! Mealys are so virulent, and persistent, and once they appear are practically impossible to completely eliminate. They can hide anywhere - stems, leaves, roots, even the soil or under rocks. They’ll always be waiting.. dormant, and invisible. They can even survive the harshest insecticides. Prevent, prevent, prevent. And if you see them ... Run while you can!
hey Summer! i absolutely love watching your videos and have been doing so for the past year that i've known about your channel. considering the content of this video- i might just have to give up on my marble queen pothos :(. i bought it from a local plant store and after bringing it home, realized that it had a bad mealybug infestation... anyway, i love your yoga outfit in this video! if you ever see this, i'd like to know where you got your super cool top from!
wish I also had a waterhose in my house.
You can get attachments to hook it up to the kitchen sink, that's what I did lol
Can you dunk the vines in a bucket of water?
What about jade? I can’t spray my leaves or they will all fall off.
Just yesterday I discovered mealies on my jade plant!! Ughhh
Thanks, very informative video ❤️
Mealybugs and scale make my skin crawl lol. I've lost a few plants to those beasts.
I do find regular scale to be harder to control.
I would panic. I lost half of my sizable collection in college to spider mites. Any sort of pests drive me crazy. Major kudos to you for being so calm and methodical in taking care of this!