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Okay folks lately I've been besieged by fungus gnats attacking my over 100 house plants. I've been hybridizing since 2004 and have fought gnats often to the point where they barely exist. This year they are out of control. I always heard they were just a nuisance though fluttering around they would sometimes pollinate plants accidently. They love to buzz me at the computer. Used to be able to clap them to death in mid air, but, my reflexes arent't that fast anymore.

Now I read up on google that the adults lay eggs in the soil and the larva eat off feeder roots on the plants. I'm having casualties as a result. I have had "adventures" previously with soil mealy bugs buy have not detected their presence in the many plants I repotted and checked with 14 x magnifier.

I always have yellow sticky cards out for the gnats, and have lately found similar on a spool with top and bottom that can hangs vertically from plant shelves. This is catching some but, no where near the population I am seeing. They fly up when I water and I found some in the saucers afterward, so now drench the saucers with Spic & span spray. My pots sit about an inch above the saucers so do not come in contact with S& S. I top water individually., and drain off any from saucers and dispose of it.

Just bought some neon yellow colored poster sheets in Wally world and had a ton of window fly trap (sticky clear about 3" x 8") so am making my own gnat traps - they love yellow.

See on Google there is now Gnatrol granuals that cost a king's ransom. I used the liquid many years ago, which didn't work at all.

If anyone has some suggestions I am wide open to them. I grow streptocarpus and they cannot be allowed to dry out sufficiently to slow the plague of gnat larvae. I know fabric softener sheets repel adult gnats but, they still manage to get to soil.

Help.
 
Okay folks lately I've been besieged by fungus gnats attacking my over 100 house plants. I've been hybridizing since 2004 and have fought gnats often to the point where they barely exist. This year they are out of control. I always heard they were just a nuisance though fluttering around they would sometimes pollinate plants accidently. They love to buzz me at the computer. Used to be able to clap them to death in mid air, but, my reflexes arent't that fast anymore.

Now I read up on google that the adults lay eggs in the soil and the larva eat off feeder roots on the plants. I'm having casualties as a result. I have had "adventures" previously with soil mealy bugs buy have not detected their presence in the many plants I repotted and checked with 14 x magnifier.

I always have yellow sticky cards out for the gnats, and have lately found similar on a spool with top and bottom that can hangs vertically from plant shelves. This is catching some but, no where near the population I am seeing. They fly up when I water and I found some in the saucers afterward, so now drench the saucers with Spic & span spray. My pots sit about an inch above the saucers so do not come in contact with S& S. I top water individually., and drain off any from saucers and dispose of it.

Just bought some neon yellow colored poster sheets in Wally world and had a ton of window fly trap (sticky clear about 3" x 8") so am making my own gnat traps - they love yellow.

See on Google there is now Gnatrol granuals that cost a king's ransom. I used the liquid many years ago, which didn't work at all.

If anyone has some suggestions I am wide open to them. I grow streptocarpus and they cannot be allowed to dry out sufficiently to slow the plague of gnat larvae. I know fabric softener sheets repel adult gnats but, they still manage to get to soil.

Help.

they feed on roots so using a systemic feed through poison is probably the best way.

https://www.amazon.com/Bonide-Product-951-Systemic-Control/dp/B000BX1HKI

deb
 
Streptocarpus is such a lovely pant and only for the most experienced of houseplant keepers.... Love them as well as African Violets

Man you have to watch the PH and everything.... maybe the feed through insecticide isnt good for them.

deb
 
More problems. Outside I noticed yellow jackets going into the garage through a small hole in the mortar by the outdoor light. We have cheap paneling on the walls which I hope is keeping them contained between the studs. So far I have not seen any inside the garage nor hear them in the wall.

I have blitzed them (wasp killer)several times at very close distance outside and it kills them fast. But I don't want to plug the entrance hole because then many will be trapped in the garage walls and looking for an exit.

No matter how many I kill more and more keep coming. They smell the spray residue and go elsewhere. I have emptied two full cans of wasp killer. I'm not certain if you call these wasps or yellow jackets or something else. They are a bit smaller and so far seem docile. I am very close to them spraying and none have come after me for revenge (knock on wood).

They are not like the usual wasps I fight every year, that put up actual wasp nests - which I find much easier to destroy. I never had any hiding inside the building. They remind me more of ground wasps that go into a hole in the ground. Usual wasps will immediately pursue me and buzz angrily. These just seem upset that they can't get inside., and fly around aimlessly.

The garage itself is somewhat heated and rarely gets below freezing in winter - so I'm afraid they will survive the winter if I don't get rid of them now. ANY suggestions that won't kill me or destroy the garage. Help. this has been one crazy year- weather wise. Which I think is way diverse kinds of insects etc are making homes where they didn't before. I have lived here 47 years and never had wasps breach the walls (brick on all sides).
 
Plug the hole Diva...unless you want to rip open the wall to remove the wasps and the nest, it's your best bet. It won't cause any smell, there isn't enough liquid in them for that. They'll just dehydrate and die off. Do it at night and with something that they won't chew through.
 
We had to plug them in a couple yrs ago. These looked like ginourmous yellow jackets on steroids. DW looked them up called them social wasps. They were in the wall of our back room we use for storage. When I sprayed the outside and pluged the hole around a window with expanding spray foam (they sell spray foam that has something in it natural pest deterrent that bugs and mice won't chew) some got into the house so we bug bombed left for the day and then sealed the inside later. I was afraid of sealing them in and stinking they were huge and 100s of them. Never stunk.
 
What I generally use on my plants is the Seven powder. It's gentle enough to use on chickens so maybe sprinkled on the soil it would deter the gnats.
 
dyslexia is seeing backwards took me a few days to find the word I knew it cou
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ldn't say it
 

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