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Pine-O-Clean for citrus stink bugs?
On the Radio 2GB gardening program today, a caller phoned in to say that
his citrus tree was infested with the bronze orange beetles so he sprayed the tree with a dilution of Pine-O-Clean and the beetles 'disappeared'. I take it that by this he meant they were killed off. Most gardeners with a citrus tree know the frustration of having to stand by and watch your small fruit dropping off as these bugs suck them dry. The Pine-O-Clean tip might be useful for someone in a similar situation to try out, as common wisdom has it that the adult beetle's shell is just too impenetrable for most insecticide sprays to have any effect and the only way to rid your tree of the bugs is to pick them off one by one. (Wear eye protection, as they can squirt a caustic jet into your face.) But just when you think you have picked them all off, more fly in from the neighbours'. Sometimes the simplest solution can be the best. I'd experiment with the dilution, testing it on only one branch first then waiting a few days to make sure the tree wasn't going to defoliate! -- John Savage (for email, replace "ks" with "k" and delete "n") |
#2
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Pine-O-Clean for citrus stink bugs?
"John Savage" wrote in message
om... On the Radio 2GB gardening program today, a caller phoned in to say that his citrus tree was infested with the bronze orange beetles so he sprayed the tree with a dilution of Pine-O-Clean and the beetles 'disappeared'. I take it that by this he meant they were killed off. Most gardeners with a citrus tree know the frustration of having to stand by and watch your small fruit dropping off as these bugs suck them dry. The Pine-O-Clean tip might be useful for someone in a similar situation to try out, as common wisdom has it that the adult beetle's shell is just too impenetrable for most insecticide sprays to have any effect and the only way to rid your tree of the bugs is to pick them off one by one. (Wear eye protection, as they can squirt a caustic jet into your face.) But just when you think you have picked them all off, more fly in from the neighbours'. Sometimes the simplest solution can be the best. I'd experiment with the dilution, testing it on only one branch first then waiting a few days to make sure the tree wasn't going to defoliate! -- John Savage (for email, replace "ks" with "k" and delete "n") Sounds good. As you said though test dilutions. We recently tried an organic herbicde at work, pine oil. It smelt exactly like pine-o-clean, though I am not sure what the make-up of pino-o-clean is, it could have pine oil in it. It worked by contact, and it must just "burn" the weed, as missing one part of the weed will mean that part will still grow. Though the pine-o-clean sounds like a good solution Let us know how it goes. -- Remove "not" from start of email address to reply |
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