Essential oil making

Aphids: banana peel, Cedar wood, hyssop, peppermint, spearmint, orange
Spider-mites: eucalyptus oil ( I made a lot of it !! Since it helps to send mosquitoes away too) cinnamon or rosemary oil does the trick too.
Items you will need: pure virgin olive oil, ½ cup ground cinnamon, cooking pan and gas stove or similar appliance.

Steps:
1 – Heat enough olive oil in a large sauté pan using medium-high heat.
2 – Add cinnamon (or rosemary, eucalyptus) and stir to mix with the olive oil.
3 – Simmer for about 3 minutes.
4 – Set aside and let it cool.
5 - After the liquid has cooled enough, strain the cinnamon oil using a fine-mesh strainer lined with a coffee filter.
6 – Pour the strained cinnamon oil into a sterilized airtight jar or bottle.
7 – Store the cinnamon oil in a cool, dry and dark place for at least one month.

If you don’t have virgin olive oil, you can substitute safflower oil.

Orange oil is good on many pests :
Orange oil – In a world full of biological pesticides which don’t work very well, orange oil stands out because it wipes out or repels entire colonies, and prevents re-infestations, instead of simply killing insects individually. D-limonene (the main constituent of orange oil) is harmless to humans, but deadly to most insects because it dissolves the waxy coating on the exoskeleton of insects, causing dehydration and asphyxiation. One application of orange oil will destroy a full colony of ants. Then, even more importantly, its powerful scent will eradicate the pheromone trail left behind by the ants. Re-infestation usually happens when “new” ants follow that trail back to the original ant nesting spot. But if they can’t find the pheromone trail, a new colony won’t be setting up shop in your home or business. This oil is so effective at killing bugs, that you should be aware of which bugs you are spraying, as this can also kill beneficial bugs and pollinators.
Orange peels (as many as you have available) with as little of the white pith as possible
Glass jar with a tight fitting lid
Vodka Coffee filter or cheese cloth/muslin
Paper towel or cheese cloth/muslin
How to make orange essential oil
Dry the orange peels on a paper towel somewhere warm and out of direct sunlight until they are hard. This usually takes about two days, depending on the humidity (it’s faster if you tear the orange peels into smaller one-inch pieces.)
the dried orange peels into smaller pieces with a sharp knife. Pop the diced peels into a glass jar. Warm the alcohol, by placing the bottle of vodka into a bowl filled with hot tap water. Pour the vodka into the jar until it covers the orange peel.

Screw on the lid and shake the jar. Shake it vigorously for a couple of minutes. Do this a few times a day for three or more days. The more you shake it and the longer you leave the peels in the vodka, the more oil will be extracted.
Strain the peels into a bowl using a coffee filter or cheese cloth. Squeeze all the liquid into the bowl. Cover the dish with a kitchen paper towel or cheese cloth. Be careful not to let the towel fall into the liquid. Let it sit for a few days and when the alcohol has evaporated, what remains will be orange oil.

Fungus gnats: a slice of potato peel in soil leave it there for a few days (4-5) throw it away and repeat until you can't see any more. also Patchouli, spearmint, orange, citronella, tagetes, cedar wood, peppermint, eucalyptus, rose geranium

and a little glass of white vinegar liquid soap in between plants or beside the stem in a big pot to trap mites.

Organic spittlebug killer recipe:-

1/2 cup hot peppers, diced.
6 cloves garlic peeled.
2 cups water.
2 teaspoons liquid soap (without bleach).

Method: Puree peppers, garlic and water together. Let sit for 24 hours. Strain and mix in the liquid soap. Wipe the plant foam off the plant and spray all parts of the plant.

Comments

thrips
Blue sticky traps are helpful for monitoring adult populations.

Thrips, Spider Mites, Aphids:

2-3 Garlic Cloves

6 large or 12 Small Hot Chili Peppers (or 1-2 Tbs hot chili powder)

1 Tbs Vegetable Oil ( Here I use my Eucalyptus Oil I made)

1 Tsp Natural Liquid Detergent or Soap
4 cups Water
3-4 cups for Dilution

Ingredients in the blender.
Strain the mixture through a cloth.
 
Last edited:
:48:An older method for a nearly identical natural insecticide recipe called for one: to steep 3-4 cups water in a glass jar to cover, with 6-12 chopped hot red peppers , 5-6 crushed/sliced garlic cloves and a tablespoon of cooking oil for 3-4 days in the hot sun. Carefully strain this into a gallon sprayer add one tsp. liquid detergent or finely grated Fels laundry soap and 6-12 cups water. Use the weaker spray for aphids or repellant and the stronger is effective killer of many insects including some beetles. Do not spray in the morning or mid day on a hot sunny day(though it will kill more bugs faster it will burn plants), may burn the leaves of some plants, spray late afternoon.:48: Will help repel some bugs and kill some others. Also discourages some birds. Found this very old recipe back in the 1970's in organic gardening book and have used it. It will kill good bugs as well and I have burned plants sometimes. The strength varies with the chiles and garlic and I used this sparingly and carefully! I usually made this in the weaker concentration making up to a gallon of spray. It definitely will kill spittle bugs and many others in the stronger concentrations. Be very careful handling this and spraying. Avoid touching the foliage with your clothes and hands until thoroughly dried and then wait a few days! It will find it's way into your eyes if you are careless or a wind blows it on you!:33: If you can afford Natural pyrethrum based insecticides they are safer and more reliable for most bug problems (Not Permethrin! a synthetic!)
 
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