SW
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2025
Used for spider mites and seemed to work well
Tracey Agopian
Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2025
Works well, would buy again.
Sarah Brosam
Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2024
I used this product for a spider mites and leaf miner outbreak, killed all of the buggers immediately! While I couldn't use them on my herbs, it seems like having the non-edible plants I sprayed this on within the vicinity of my herbs, it was powerful enough to still kill them all! I imagine they're still getting exposure to the fumes and landing on the treated plants occasionally, so it was still enough to kill them. I did still also spray the edible plants with some insecticidal soap as well, but that was 2 weeks later as a "just in case".Be careful when using this indoors or take indoor plants outside before you spray them! I sprayed this on some plants indoors and it made me cough like it was mace, I opened up my patio door to get some ventilation and let them air out, then everything was okay.
SRX
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2024
We noticed tiny webs all around our lime tree. Eventually the leaves all starting falling one by one. Did a little search and found that spider mites may be to blame. Purchased this, sprayed down the remaining leaves and branches and the next day they seemed brighte and back to life. Wish I had known about it sooner.As others have said, the smell is pretty strong so make sure to wear a mask when applying.EDIT: 3/26/24:After using this for several weeks, the fungus gnats are still around, mostly in the soil. I found another product that works wonders for fungus gnats. It's called Mosquito Bits. After two uses it seems to have killed off all of the gnats!
Shelley
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2024
This 3 in 1 plant disease and mite control works great on my garden roses. As the temperature drops and more frequent rain, some of the rose leaves are infested with black spots. After a couple of times spraying treatment with this product, the black spots are under control and stopped dropping leaves.
C
Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2024
When used as directed, this Insecticide, Fungicide and Miticide kills almost all pests and diseases without harming the plants. It's a great all-in-one product that immediately tackles the mite, fungus and/or insects that are decimating your plants, bushes or trees. With our climate in FL, fungus, mites and insects are abundant, so this is an effective and inexpensive way to eliminate their destruction. The only issue I had was that Amazon just put it in a brown paper bag and the bottle leaked most of the product out. This is not the way most of the liquid items I order arrive, so I'll have to just mark it up to an inexperienced packer.
Thinking Out Loud
Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2023
This product worked, once I really doused my plant in it.I moved into a house with lots of flowering plants in the yard, but I knew nothing about gardening. I first noticed black spots and white powdery stuff on a giant rhododendron in 2020. Was it a fungus? Mildew? I had no idea. Not thinking much of it, I just trimmed away the handful of affected branches.The black spots and white powder were back in 2021. I bought this spray and used it kind of meekly. I can be mechanically challenged and was actually intimidated by the hose connection; the printed instructions made it sound confusing but once I saw the spraying mechanism, it made sense. I was surprised at how big and far-reaching the spray was, so doing a quick once-over seemed like enough at the time.In 2022, the black spots and white powder came back with a vengeance. Now I was getting worried. I actually did 3 things:1. I aggressively cut away the blighted branches. I mean, I really butchered it.2. I cut away branches that were low to the ground and reached waaaaay under the bush to rake away old fallen leaves and dead branches. Maybe this is obvious and something an experienced homeowner would do as regular maintenance, but it was something new for this gardening newb.3. I used this spray GENEROUSLY. I started on the far side and made sure the spray reached the very back of the bush, top to bottom, then slowly made my way around the plant, making sure the spray reached the trunk and every inch of interior branches and leaves.Now it's 2023, and I put down new mulch in the spring. I've been so relieved to see new leaves growing in to fill all the empty spots that had been cut away, and I'm thrilled to report that I see NO black spots or white powdery stuff!!So, along with trimming and doing general plant clean-up, I do credit this spray with reviving my rhododendron.
T
Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2020
I tried EVERYTHING to get rid of the spider mites on my plumeria. I searched high and low across the interwebs for a solution that works and the only things anybody would recommend were "natural" or "organic" like neem oil and citric acid or vinegar. Well I tried all of those. I tried soap and water. I tried blasting the buggers off. I soaked the soil in the stuff. But the treatments destroyed my plants and the mites ALWAYS came back with a vengeance.I tried looking up chemical miticides but information is just apparently really hard to find - probably because the entire internet is crowded with junk advice like the above. But I did eventually find this. They advertise as "Science-based" and I do love me some science. I read the ingredients, read the MSDS for the solution as well as each of the active ingredients separately, and of course checked reviews. And then I bought it.AND THIS STUFF WORKS.Mites gone. Plants healthy. No, I mean HEALTHY. I haven't seen the leaves on my plumeria look this good in ages! It also eliminated the cross-contaminated mites from my citrus bonzai. Now that I have this I'm saddened that I gave up on my jackfruit because of the mite infestation.I won't use this outdoors because I keep honeybees. Please think of the bees before using this in your yard.It is non-edible so don't apply to anything you plan to eat. (Thankfully spider mites don't like pineapple!)