Safe Homegrown Pesticides
You can rid your garden of many destructive pests with effective natural remedies, including pyrethrum, garlic, feverfew, marigolds and moles, moderation is the key.
By Diane Downs
July/August 1986
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Yarrow can be used as a tea to treat crops.
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From Mother Nos. 62 and 70
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You can rid your garden of many destructive pests with effective natural remedies.
Few experiences are more frustrating, more irritating, or more just plain maddening than suffering an invasion of creeping, crawling, or flying garden pests. And the situation can get even worse when you start looking for a way to solve your bug problems. Here, for instance, is a sample of the kind of "reassurance" you can find on a typical pesticide can, box, or bottle label: CAUTION! HARMFUL TO HUMANS, PETS, AND LIVESTOCK. DO NOT INHALE OR LET PRODUCT COME IN CONTACT WITH SKIN. DO NOT USE VEGETABLES TREATED WITH THIS PRODUCT FOR ONE WEEK AFTER APPLICATION . . . etc., etc., etc.
Fortunately, there is a way to have healthy crops without handling poisons . . . and that's to grow your own safe insecticides! Over the ages many pungent herbs have served man as natural pest repellents. Such homegrown protective agents were used effectively long before the present chemical craze, and they still work.
Pyrethrum
One of the better-known organic pesticides is pyrethrum (Chrysanthemum cinerariaefolium or Chrysanthemum coccineum). I find it best to grow my supply rather than buying any, though; some commercial products labeled "pyrethrum dust" are simply a pyrethrum powder base that's laced with those toxic, residual poisons characteristic of today's overkill pest control philosophy.
The pyrethrum plants, also known as painted daisies or painted ladies, provide pest-repellent action when grown either throughout your garden or as border plants.
On the other hand, if you want to treat a localized infested area, you can pick, dry, and crush the flowers' petals to make your own safe pyrethrum dust. Or, as an alternative, make a strong "tea" of the powder and spray it directly on the insects. Remember: Pyrethrum is not residual . . . but it is toxic to soft-bodied insects (aphids, etc.) and to some cold-blooded vertebrates on contact. The dust is nontoxic to you, your livestock, and your pets, however . . . and can even be used as a safe flea powder.
Garlic
Widely known for its aroma, garlic will turn away more than a few garden invaders. When interplanted throughout your plot, berry patch, or orchard, this ancient herb will help scare off Japanese beetles, aphids, and other annoying insects. (If you fear that such widespread planting will produce too much garlic for one homestead, bear this in mind: As always, there's nothing like homegrown . . . and the aromatic plant has innumerable applications for year-round culinary and medicinal use. For example, it can rebuff such beasties as mosquitoes, ticks, and intestinal worms.)
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