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The most organic home remedy that I use when dealing with Japanese beetles are my fingers and a pail of soapy water. I just pluck them up and drop them in the pail.

2007-07-12 16:37:35 · answer #1 · answered by Sptfyr 7 · 0 0

The link below written by professionals gives you the same advice as Yahoo! persons
..................Management
http://www.organicgardenpests.com/organicpestcontrol3.html
The Japanese beetle has many natural enemies: the spring and fall typhia wasps, birds, and skunks are helpful beetle enemies.

Milky spore disease is harmless to plants, animals, and humans, but deadly for the beetle. It is most effective in areas bigger than one acre. Talk to a local garden group or county representative for more information.

Remove diseased fruit from the trees and ground, and keep the area weeded and clean.

Larkspur is poisonous for the beetles, and they avoid the odor of geraniums.

Handpick the beetles and drop them into a bucket of water with a think layer of kerosene.

Traps painted yellow and baited with fermenting fruit, sugar, and water catch thousands of beetles - empty this daily.

2007-07-12 18:56:13 · answer #2 · answered by LucySD 7 · 0 0

Beetle traps only attract more beetles to your yard.
Soapy water has always worked for me. I use dishwashing liquid mised with some water. The ratio isn't important. Just use enough soap to get some suds going. Then flick the beetles off your plants into the water and let them sit overnight. They will drown and you can just toss the water in the woods, under your shrubs, wherever.

Milky spore is used to treat for the grubs thst live in your lawn that eventually hatch into Japanese Beetles. It is effective but if your neighobors don't use it, too, the grubs and beetles will just come back.

2007-07-12 17:57:37 · answer #3 · answered by Sword Lily 7 · 0 0

For a home remedy, what I did was bought a butterfly net and tapped the branch of the plant with it and the beetles would fall inside it. Then I fed them to the ducks so it gives them a good protein meal and they love it. For me it worked better than the beetle bags.

2007-07-12 17:05:19 · answer #4 · answered by RGK 2 · 0 0

Try companion planting. I've been doing this for 2 seasons now with incredible results. To experiment try planting sweet alyssum, pennyroyale or petunias near your problem area and see what happens in a week. Should improve or dissappear. I highly reccomend a book called "Great Garden Companions" for more info.
The point is to prevent the bugs from even showing up by a method of confusion with other plants that are around them.

2007-07-12 18:21:20 · answer #5 · answered by gypsysunka 2 · 0 0

For organic... give them swimming lessons in oil but I highly recommend Milky Spore. It does the trick by giving the beetles a virus that they pass on to other throughout the years. Work like a dream come true, but takes time to eliminate all of them.

2007-07-12 16:39:18 · answer #6 · answered by Koko 3 · 0 0

You could try beetle bags. They are little plastic buckets mounted on stakes that attract the beetles with scent. Once inside, the beetles cannot escape.

2007-07-12 17:16:00 · answer #7 · answered by Rath 3 · 0 0

Take a bucket or pitcher of soapy water. place your supply up them and knock them into the water. make constructive the bucket is decrease than them as a results of fact as a protection mechanism they'll drop today down. i've got killed a lot this way. enable them to take a seat down interior the water for half-hour or so and unload them. in case you're able to do it in the past it gets warm. you will get extra that way as a results of fact they don't seem to be as lively. by the way, i don't advise making use of any form of keep offered insecticide. they frequently kill beneficials like bees and butterflies besides as a results of fact the beetles and you in all probability do not choose that. stable success!

2016-10-21 02:01:46 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Try a product called B .T.

2007-07-12 17:27:29 · answer #9 · answered by Mr B 2 · 0 0

get a spray bottle with water, dish soap and spray your plants it may take several spraying, it should work.

2007-07-14 06:04:34 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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