Please need help!!

Joined
Jun 13, 2022
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Location
Lapkricio1117!
Country
United Kingdom
Good day everyone, but if be honest not very good day for me and my wisteria.
I planted this wisteria from seed last year. I want to make bonsai tree from it. Last year it was growing nicely all summer, but closer to october it get spider mites it looked horible, i use some tretment and from indoor i put it outdoor, left it during winter outside thinking it dead, but this spring it start giving buts, and start grow nicely again. Unforchinaly last 2 weeks something happend and it looks like spider mite came back. I don’t know what to do. I bring it outdoor again, left it in part direct sun part shady aeria. I read some much in internet, but it too much information. Maybe someone have some problem and fix it. Please help my wisteria
 

Attachments

  • D870096D-E87C-46FE-BF40-73FE2EFDCE30.jpeg
    D870096D-E87C-46FE-BF40-73FE2EFDCE30.jpeg
    144.1 KB · Views: 10
  • 23AD4C4C-1CAA-46F3-AA44-BA322B8FE0BC.jpeg
    23AD4C4C-1CAA-46F3-AA44-BA322B8FE0BC.jpeg
    127.2 KB · Views: 14
  • 0FE2CAC0-93ED-4224-AEEC-4C5BF88A17CC.jpeg
    0FE2CAC0-93ED-4224-AEEC-4C5BF88A17CC.jpeg
    133.9 KB · Views: 10
Joined
Feb 2, 2014
Messages
11,563
Reaction score
5,648
Location
La Porte Texas
Hardiness Zone
8b
Country
United States
I am a vegetable gardener only, but a spider mite is a spider mite. It is much easier to prevent an infestation than to cure one but this is what I do when I do get, rarely, an infestation of spider mites. I mix liquid seaweed and FRESH Neem Oil @ 1 oz of each to a gallon of water and spray every inch of the plant. If you see webs spray every 5 days and if you don't see webs spray every 7-9 days. I have found that this disrupts their reproductive cycle. It normally takes 2 sprayings to eliminate them but might take more. What the seaweed does is it makes the plants "skin" tougher and harder for the mites to do any more damage plus it is a good foliar spray for micro-nutrients.
 
Joined
Jun 13, 2022
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Location
Lapkricio1117!
Country
United Kingdom
I am a vegetable gardener only, but a spider mite is a spider mite. It is much easier to prevent an infestation than to cure one but this is what I do when I do get, rarely, an infestation of spider mites. I mix liquid seaweed and FRESH Neem Oil @ 1 oz of each to a gallon of water and spray every inch of the plant. If you see webs spray every 5 days and if you don't see webs spray every 7-9 days. I have found that this disrupts their reproductive cycle. It normally takes 2 sprayings to eliminate them but might take more. What the seaweed does is it makes the plants "skin" tougher and harder for the mites to do any more damage plus it is a good foliar spray for micro-nutrients.
Thanks you for your advice. Will order suppliments today
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
27,791
Messages
264,032
Members
14,526
Latest member
modernmaisonco

Latest Threads

Top