Hey everybody! I started a raised garden bed company, Gro-Rite! My first product is a beautiful raised garden bed you can assemble in 10 minutes or less. Claim your bed before they are gone - pre-orders are piling up fast and quantities are limited. -> groritegarden.com/launch
I HATE squash vine borers!!! I finally gave up growing squash they got so bad here on the Texas Gulf Coast. I tried stabbing them inside the vine with a thin needle. Injecting BT sounds like a great idea! I've watched a couple of your videos now, I like your straight to the point manner. Every minute of viewing time is well spent.
Thanks for the info. I just lost a huge beautiful squash to these things. I cut open the stem and saw these big white grub looking things. Too late for the plant but I picked the grubs out and put them on my bird feeder. The birds loved them! Now they know how it feels to be eaten!
I want to say thank you for saving my squash plant! this was my first year planting and made the mistake of only planting one lol when the vine borers attacked i was about to just pull it up and cut my losses. that was in july that i watched your video and it’s september 10th and i made squash casserole tonight for dinner. i am forever thankful for you and telling everyone about your video!!!
Because of your very clear answer without a bunch of fluff, I’m a grateful new subscriber and turned on all notifications 🔔!! Thanks a million, my squash says thank you too!!!
I, too, have recently experienced the devastation of the borer. It lays so many eggs that it is overwhelming to remove. I have already lost my pumpkin, zucchini, and summer squash to this pest. My delicata is hanging in there.
I saw a vine borer moth on my pumpkin about 2-3 weeks ago. I didn't know what it was and whatever I typed into google told me it was a pollinator so I left it alone! Now all my pumpkins and most of my squash have splits with that yellow gunk coming out. I feel so stupid. Thanks for this straightforward video. Will definitely be injecting as soon as possible.
@@AddisonJallo I caught 3 so far this season, all with the vacuum I adapted from a tool set, I also tried painting the vine near the root with dry wall compound to see if that will work, I have a few unpainted for control!
If you ever find a weird dark red/brownish bullet type looking thing with a hard shell in your soil, those are the fully formed larva ready to emerge as the moth. Smash those things! Dig around in the top 2 inches of your soil in late.spring before planting any kind of squash to find them. They squirm really weird too. They're about half an inch to an inch long and have a point end and a rounder end. They're gross
@@guruglitched aw man ... 😔 That hurts. All the work and they look amazing and one stupid bug gets in. I feel your pain. Lost two gorgeous pumpkin plants already
Thank you so much for sharing this tip, Justin. I've lost so many plants to them over the years and I just saw a vine borer moth on my young squash plants. It's time to battle the hateful things, once again!
I started injecting BT into my squash last year. It works great in getting rid of the squash borers. I combine that with growing my squash vertically to manage the squash borers. THanks for the information.
I am in Upstate SC. Been growing squash and zucchini for a decade now and just had the first casualty to the SVB. New property this year, never had them at old house. Thanks for the video. I will start injecting the rest of the plants in hopes I don’t lost them too.
Somebody on some gardening video (sorry - can't remember who it was) said that a good way to avoid squash vine borers is to plant squash as a fall crop. The borers are all gone by then. Since I live in the deep south, I could probably grow them during the fall season.
I wondered what happened to my squash last year and I think that's what happened to them they were so beautiful and then all the sudden they started to die off I was so upset. Thank you so much for all your information your videos have helped me to make a beautiful garden this year
Not just in US south. We get them bad up here in Central Ontario. They love the humid summers here, and cold doesn't kill them. Thank you very much for the info!
Ive found that using really good mesh netting is the best method. Use it during May and June and even into July if you don't mind continuing to hand pollinate. It may be that u have to do some hand pollinating during June but you don't have to worry about treating it with anything. That said, squash bugs (the stink bugs) will still find a way in so you'll need to still check the plant and constantly remove leaves throughout the season that aren't needed anymore.
@@kellyriddell5014 once they start to yellow, wilt, dry, or get disease. Naturally happens to leaves below the fruit production line, as the plant ages.
I'm from the eastern part of the state. I've been to Shelby a few times to visit a friend attending GW, but it was over forty years ago. It was a nice area. He ended up making his home in Forest City. I grew produce on my farm until I had to retire a few years ago. I would wrap aluminum foil around the stem of my squash plants to try to avoid squash borer damage. It worked okay until the vine grew too thick and split the wrap. I just had to keep an eye on it and rewrap it before it did. I'd make sure the foil wrap was a few inches down in the soil when I planted the plants, and six or more inches wrapped above the soil. And I wouldn't wrap it tight, to give the stem room to grow. You should try it out on a couple of plants just to see if it works for you. You may be able to make some improvements to the technique. The Bt injection is a great idea btw.👍👍
Hi Justin, Thank you for your video. Does this work for cucumber beetles and their larvae? They do similar damage. I just lost a whole crop of cucumbers to the beetles.
Thank You so much for this tip and video. I live in S.E. Minnesota and this year my squash did not make it, after asking others I discovered this moth/worm in my vines. I will order the product that you recommended and next year I'm hoping to have some beautiful squash.
Thank you for this! I found eggs today on my squash and took great pleasure in popping them. Just in case I missed some I will be buying the Monterey BT and a syringe!
I will definitely try this. I do have one question. With the B.T., do I inject the concentrated liquid or do I prepare it as I usually do (1 tbsp in 1 gallon of water) and use 1 ml of that mixture? Please advise.
I caught 3 moths so far this season, all with the vacuum I adapted from a tool set, I also tried painting the vine near the root with dry wall compound to see if that will work, I have a few unpainted ones for control if they will fall victim to the moth! The vacuum is also great for catching cucumber beetles and squash bugs!
Thank you soo very much for sharing this bc I’m sooo frustrated w these insects bc they have been killing my plants yr after year and I have tried everything . So I’m gt try this!! I love to garden so thank you sooo much for sharing this!
I grew up near Shelby, went to SHS and Gardner-Webb and although I don't get back there much now I still consider it my home. Good job on the video and I know how hard it is to get rid of the borers and what they can do to your plants.
Thanks for this good information! We bought the concentrated Monterey B.t. but don't know if we should dilute it before injecting it in the squash vine. Please clarify for us.
I used BT injections last year and still lost my plants. However I did get rid of the squash bug using garden diatomaceous earth. Hoping for better luck this year.
this method of injecting the stem with BT saved my crop this year. still saw SOME damage, but didnt lose any plants. I reinject every 7 days and it has worked wonders
@@sherrysenn2177 I have to add a tad bit of water to let the needle pull it easier but I mean we are making a capful at a time, so exact mix is hard to say. I have 4 zucchini plants and that takes maybe a few cc's each to treat each week
Hi Justin! If you have lost squash plants to borer should we inject BT into the healthy squash plants as a preventative? Or only once you notice the eggs?
I inject it soon as they are big enough and spray every 3 to 4 days, also works on hornworms, well any caterpillar, I almost everything in the evening with BT.
Thank you for the video. I used BT last year and still lost my plants after only one squash. Do you inject your plants in advance, or do you wait until you spot a problem?
before. I start as soon as the plant is big enough to start showing flowers and has some stem to it. I retreat every 7 days. did not lose any this year
More help for attacking the vine borers that have decimated the beautiful squash plants in my garden for the last several years. Thank you so much! I am a new subscriber to your channel and will be watching more of your helpful videos. Thank you!! :)
Thanks so much for this. I'm in SENC too, and i had ONE SEASON of successful squash harvest before they found me, late in the season. Last year NOT ONE SINGLE squash lived.
I want to know where you get the needle I've been using the one you inject seasons into your turkey which is a big needle I don't know anyone who use regular needles since insulin is now in pens
What kind of syringe are you using? When I try to inject, it seems like the BT is not delivered to the inside of the stem but rather spills outside the stem. I’m wondering if I need a different type of syringe.
I wrap my squash stem with aluminum foil and over the soil around the plant as soon as the plant starts growing. Seems to work well just have to keep a watch on the stalk as it grows.
Be sure to look for signs of eggs or entry below the soil surface as well. Thats where most of mine were. The eggs are so hard to see. Every couple days take some duct tape and tap around your stems. If there's eggs you'll get them on the tape. You can also wrap nylon stockings or plant tape or foil around your stems. If your vine starts going to a pale color and feels squishy, your plant is already gone unfortunately. Also a deep yellow solo cup smeared with tangle foot goo kept close your plant stem can often catch the moths
Interesting information. I believe that butternut squash (and others in that family) are not a food source of the vine borer, at least Waltham is not attacked by them.
An inch and a half up from the stem where they usually penetrate you should inject BT. It won't hurt your polinators, and it will kill the larvae. It works. Sounds crazy but if you dont want them, thatsba solution that works.
Hi Justin!! First time I’ve heard of this but Ive already got these critters in my new plants!!! Is Bonide brand ok and how do I dose so that I don’t turn my plants into literal bT?? Lol. Also how do I use this stuff on cucumbers, corn, etc??? You’re so very helpful to me being only a 3 year beginner.!!!
I lost 8 plants to em.. now I know at least - wait, is it possible to save them even if the borer has made a good nest but the plants still standing okay? I ordered some BT asap!
Would you do anything to treat the soil during the winter and before spring planting? Or is injecting BT once the plant's base is large enough the only remedy? Can you plant other veggies, such as onions, tomatoes, carrots, etc., in the same bed/location without negative effects from the borers?
I did what you said in this video as soon as the plants were not absolutely tiny, but my squash are currently dead...the main stems of all 15 plants became mush and dried out. I tore open some of the more dead areas and found over a dozen living in a small area. No dead ones. Now I'm just building up dirt around every single area that can make roots to try and save the rest of it. I'm not sure what to do next year because this didn't work. I might just not plant at all because all that effort is not worth an entire four ripe squash.
How about using on gourd plants? I am a grower in SC. Last year I lost my arbor to this pest. I have two bottles of BT I purchased end of last season, to use this year. Any thoughts, I would be very much grateful
I grow white acre peas in my raised beds. Last year I got hit with a bug that laid eggs that turned into hundreds of worms. Had I not seen it on the plant as soon as they hatched, I’d have had no peas and no plants left. I sat and squished every one of those hundred or so worms. So glad I did. What can I prevent those with? Thanks
This is a great tip that I utilized this year but what about spaghetti squash that I’ve got growing vertical. I’ve lost the plant to vine borers for a 3rd year in a row. They seem to be laying eggs all over the plant and then entering the plant at higher levels and I just can’t keep up.
I saw a svb on my pumpkins today. I see where I should inject the pumpkin about an inch and a half from the soil line. Should I also inject in the nodes along the vine?
Hi there! A NC friend shared your channel with me recently. I'm in SC. I've used BT in the past but this year I can't find it anywhere! The only thing I can find are products containing BT but with a lot of other ingredients that are toxic. What do you recommend? Sadly I am losing my squash plants left and right.
Hey there! Thanks for checking out the channel! I have a link in the description of this video for the BT I use. It's for organic gardening. Let me know if you can't find it.
Every single (seminole) pumpkin vine died last year, no pumpkins! I did get a butternut that almost matured and then I saw a tiny hole in the squash! UGH! I'm going to try again with your method - but how old/large should the vine be before beginning this treatment?
When you buy BT it specify if it’s concentrated or ready to mix! Just follow the directions. He’s actually showing the concentrated container, it needs to be diluted.
It is now July 10 and down in Georgia I’ve lost every one of my squash plants. I had 15 plants. And planted I. Succession and those dang vine borers destroyed the 8 new plants I had growing in. Am I finished when it comes to getting any harvest out of squash? I feel like I can’t win. And I didn’t even get to harvest not a single bit of squash.
Hi. I attempted this early in the season before there was any evidence of borers, trying to be proactive, and (Black Beauty zucchini) the main stem was so hard the needle wouldn't penetrate, it was a large bore needle, and I got sprayed in the face. No way was it going in. So I tried injecting into some of the hollow leaf stems in the same area, hoping the Bt would run down the hollow stem and wind up where a larva might contact it. It killed the stem and leaf, a couple days later the place I injected was brown and shriveled and the leaf beyond it died. So, I couldn't be proactive, and now I have borers like crazy and they've killed about 90% of the Z. I'm trying to save what's left of it. I watched this video closely, and when you inject the base stem it looks like you have pruned off several leaves at the very base, does this create a softer area where you can inject? Do you try to inject where the cut-off leaf was attached to the base stem? And how do you smother eggs - neem oil? How often? I'm in central Iowa, most likely only one lifecycle of these things. I think. --thanks for your expertise
Hey everybody! I started a raised garden bed company, Gro-Rite! My first product is a beautiful raised garden bed you can assemble in 10 minutes or less. Claim your bed before they are gone - pre-orders are piling up fast and quantities are limited. -> groritegarden.com/launch
But where do you buy a hypodermic needle?
@@1960leeann right? I would feel a little weird asking around for them 😅
@@1960leeannRight?! I would feel a little weird asking around for one 😅
I HATE squash vine borers!!! I finally gave up growing squash they got so bad here on the Texas Gulf Coast. I tried stabbing them inside the vine with a thin needle. Injecting BT sounds like a great idea!
I've watched a couple of your videos now, I like your straight to the point manner. Every minute of viewing time is well spent.
Thanks for the info. I just lost a huge beautiful squash to these things. I cut open the stem and saw these big white grub looking things. Too late for the plant but I picked the grubs out and put them on my bird feeder. The birds loved them! Now they know how it feels to be eaten!
it's dark but i felt a lot better reading that, thank you
Same thing just happened to me😢
I want to say thank you for saving my squash plant! this was my first year planting and made the mistake of only planting one lol when the vine borers attacked i was about to just pull it up and cut my losses. that was in july that i watched your video and it’s september 10th and i made squash casserole tonight for dinner. i am forever thankful for you and telling everyone about your video!!!
@@ashtonlumley3135 Super glad to hear that! Thank you for letting me know and congrats on your successful harvest!
You saved my squash this season!! Thank you.
That's awesome to hear! Glad it worked 💪
Because of your very clear answer without a bunch of fluff, I’m a grateful new subscriber and turned on all notifications 🔔!! Thanks a million, my squash says thank you too!!!
Thank you so much! I’m convinced squash borers and bugs are the spawn of Satan. Will this work for winter squash as well?
I would have to agree! They're the worst. Yes, this should on winter squash, but have not personally tried it before on those.
I completely agree with you and add mosquitos to that
I, too, have recently experienced the devastation of the borer. It lays so many eggs that it is overwhelming to remove. I have already lost my pumpkin, zucchini, and summer squash to this pest. My delicata is hanging in there.
Without a doubt
OMGOSH, thank you! I just found a vine bore this morning. It is turning the main stem to mush. I will definitely treat with this today!!!
I saw a vine borer moth on my pumpkin about 2-3 weeks ago. I didn't know what it was and whatever I typed into google told me it was a pollinator so I left it alone! Now all my pumpkins and most of my squash have splits with that yellow gunk coming out. I feel so stupid. Thanks for this straightforward video. Will definitely be injecting as soon as possible.
It happens I had the same mistake I told my wife oh wow look at that bee looking thing and now all my pumpkins are wilting!🙄! I’m trying this too!!
@@AddisonJallo I caught 3 so far this season, all with the vacuum I adapted from a tool set, I also tried painting the vine near the root with dry wall compound to see if that will work, I have a few unpainted for control!
If you ever find a weird dark red/brownish bullet type looking thing with a hard shell in your soil, those are the fully formed larva ready to emerge as the moth. Smash those things! Dig around in the top 2 inches of your soil in late.spring before planting any kind of squash to find them. They squirm really weird too. They're about half an inch to an inch long and have a point end and a rounder end. They're gross
Well you are not alone! I JUST had to rip everything out because it was too late. I was told they were pollinators as well..... 😭
@@guruglitched aw man ... 😔 That hurts. All the work and they look amazing and one stupid bug gets in. I feel your pain. Lost two gorgeous pumpkin plants already
Thank you so much for sharing this tip, Justin. I've lost so many plants to them over the years and I just saw a vine borer moth on my young squash plants. It's time to battle the hateful things, once again!
I started injecting BT into my squash last year. It works great in getting rid of the squash borers. I combine that with growing my squash vertically to manage the squash borers. THanks for the information.
I am in Upstate SC. Been growing squash and zucchini for a decade now and just had the first casualty to the SVB. New property this year, never had them at old house. Thanks for the video. I will start injecting the rest of the plants in hopes I don’t lost them too.
Somebody on some gardening video (sorry - can't remember who it was) said that a good way to avoid squash vine borers is to plant squash as a fall crop. The borers are all gone by then. Since I live in the deep south, I could probably grow them during the fall season.
I'll try that thanks for the advice
I wondered what happened to my squash last year and I think that's what happened to them they were so beautiful and then all the sudden they started to die off I was so upset. Thank you so much for all your information your videos have helped me to make a beautiful garden this year
Not just in US south. We get them bad up here in Central Ontario. They love the humid summers here, and cold doesn't kill them. Thank you very much for the info!
Ive found that using really good mesh netting is the best method. Use it during May and June and even into July if you don't mind continuing to hand pollinate. It may be that u have to do some hand pollinating during June but you don't have to worry about treating it with anything. That said, squash bugs (the stink bugs) will still find a way in so you'll need to still check the plant and constantly remove leaves throughout the season that aren't needed anymore.
I'm gonna be trying the mesh net method this year cause I've also seen that work before
How do you determine which leaves the plant doesn't need anymore, though?
@@kellyriddell5014 once they start to yellow, wilt, dry, or get disease. Naturally happens to leaves below the fruit production line, as the plant ages.
Kentucky here. Squash Vine Borer central. Thanks for the info
I'm from the eastern part of the state. I've been to Shelby a few times to visit a friend attending GW, but it was over forty years ago. It was a nice area. He ended up making his home in Forest City.
I grew produce on my farm until I had to retire a few years ago.
I would wrap aluminum foil around the stem of my squash plants to try to avoid squash borer damage. It worked okay until the vine grew too thick and split the wrap. I just had to keep an eye on it and rewrap it before it did. I'd make sure the foil wrap was a few inches down in the soil when I planted the plants, and six or more inches wrapped above the soil. And I wouldn't wrap it tight, to give the stem room to grow.
You should try it out on a couple of plants just to see if it works for you. You may be able to make some improvements to the technique.
The Bt injection is a great idea btw.👍👍
Definitely need to try this method. I lost lots of my squash plants from vine borers. Thank you for sharing.
Hi Justin, Thank you for your video. Does this work for cucumber beetles and their larvae? They do similar damage. I just lost a whole crop of cucumbers to the beetles.
Thank You so much for this tip and video. I live in S.E. Minnesota and this year my squash did not make it, after asking others I discovered this moth/worm in my vines. I will order the product that you recommended and next year I'm hoping to have some beautiful squash.
Thank you for this! I found eggs today on my squash and took great pleasure in popping them. Just in case I missed some I will be buying the Monterey BT and a syringe!
I'm in Texas and wished that I saw this earlier in the season. The darn SVB took out two of my squash plants. Thanks for sharing. Good video.
Do you have to dilute the BT first or just inject it as is?
Did you dilute the BT? It looked pretty concentrated.
Thank you! I decided last year I was DONE with squash of any kind. I may try again now.
Thanks for the video. Are you injecting full strength BT or is it diluted?
I will definitely try this. I do have one question. With the B.T., do I inject the concentrated liquid or do I prepare it as I usually do (1 tbsp in 1 gallon of water) and use 1 ml of that mixture? Please advise.
Hi, did you ever find out if it should be used full strength or diluted?
I want to know too!
I caught 3 moths so far this season, all with the vacuum I adapted from a tool set, I also tried painting the vine near the root with dry wall compound to see if that will work, I have a few unpainted ones for control if they will fall victim to the moth! The vacuum is also great for catching cucumber beetles and squash bugs!
Thank you soo very much for sharing this bc I’m sooo frustrated w these insects bc they have been killing my plants yr after year and I have tried everything . So I’m gt try this!! I love to garden so thank you sooo much for sharing this!
I grew up near Shelby, went to SHS and Gardner-Webb and although I don't get back there much now I still consider it my home. Good job on the video and I know how hard it is to get rid of the borers and what they can do to your plants.
Hi, thanks for the info. just wanted to ask if the bt you are injecting is full strength out of the bottle or diluted with water.
I have the same question?????
Is this straight BT, or diluted to spray mixture instructions?
You convinced me to start my own garden! I’m growing so many vegetables this year!
Do you inject the BT in the consented form or is it diluted?
I have the same question???
Love your videos, Justin! Do you use the bT full strength or dilute it (and what ratio)? Should I also use this on my cucumber plants?
I have been using a concentrate but if it were diluted down some it should still be okay! 👍
@@skgreenhouse yes you should dilute it a mega amount, not straight like that.
Is this something you do as preventative or do you only do this if eggs are present?
What gauge needle do you use? I'm assuming larger than what you would use with people. Maybe 20, or 18? It's green, so either 14 or 18....?
Thanks for this good information! We bought the concentrated Monterey B.t. but don't know if we should dilute it before injecting it in the squash vine. Please clarify for us.
It did not look diluted in the video. I use it constantly, and the color in his bowl looked completely undiluted.
I used BT injections last year and still lost my plants. However I did get rid of the squash bug using garden diatomaceous earth. Hoping for better luck this year.
Same here. I finally gave up last year. This year I have a mesh walk in shelter for my squash. I'll just have to hand pollinate.
@Texas Skyz Mini Farm and Homestead Interesting, which one did you get?
DT has never penetrated the shields of my squash bugs. how on earth did it work for you????
this method of injecting the stem with BT saved my crop this year. still saw SOME damage, but didnt lose any plants. I reinject every 7 days and it has worked wonders
Do you use bt full strength?
@@sherrysenn2177 I have to add a tad bit of water to let the needle pull it easier but I mean we are making a capful at a time, so exact mix is hard to say. I have 4 zucchini plants and that takes maybe a few cc's each to treat each week
Justin thx so much for the tips, but what did you put on the squash, they are so big and beautiful
Been using BT injections couple years now. Just applied it for the first time, this season, last week.🤞
I'm definitely giving this a try. Thank you
Thank you for this!! It’s extremely helpful and shows me I was doing it right all along!!
my pumpkin plants are huge and sprawling. Does the one injection protect the whole plant or just that site?
Hi Justin! If you have lost squash plants to borer should we inject BT into the healthy squash plants as a preventative? Or only once you notice the eggs?
I inject it soon as they are big enough and spray every 3 to 4 days, also works on hornworms, well any caterpillar, I almost everything in the evening with BT.
Is it safe to eat this as it is uptake by the plant ?
Thank you for the video. I used BT last year and still lost my plants after only one squash. Do you inject your plants in advance, or do you wait until you spot a problem?
before. I start as soon as the plant is big enough to start showing flowers and has some stem to it. I retreat every 7 days. did not lose any this year
Question,,,I have some started can I use this now??
Would you recommend starting this even if we haven’t seen anything as of yet?
What type of needle were you using to inject the BT?
More help for attacking the vine borers that have decimated the beautiful squash plants in my garden for the last several years. Thank you so much! I am a new subscriber to your channel and will be watching more of your helpful videos. Thank you!! :)
Excellent video! Straight and to the point! Now, if I can get my squash to grow like yours!!!
Great video, one question though- why do you sterilize between applications? Is there also a disease you're trying not to spread?
Thanks so much for this. I'm in SENC too, and i had ONE SEASON of successful squash harvest before they found me, late in the season. Last year NOT ONE SINGLE squash lived.
And yes, I live in the western part of southeastern North Carolina, so I live in WSENC, Western South Eastern North Carolina 😐
I want to know where you get the needle I've been using the one you inject seasons into your turkey which is a big needle I don't know anyone who use regular needles since insulin is now in pens
What kind of syringe are you using? When I try to inject, it seems like the BT is not delivered to the inside of the stem but rather spills outside the stem. I’m wondering if I need a different type of syringe.
Hi . .You didn't mention how much of the BT to use besides the 1mm Did you dilute it or use full strength please sir
In another comment he said he used it full strength.
I used Bonide BT, 1ml but I didn't dilute first. Did I make a mistake not diluting?
I wrap my squash stem with aluminum foil and over the soil around the plant as soon as the plant starts growing. Seems to work well just have to keep a watch on the stalk as it grows.
Be sure to look for signs of eggs or entry below the soil surface as well. Thats where most of mine were. The eggs are so hard to see. Every couple days take some duct tape and tap around your stems. If there's eggs you'll get them on the tape. You can also wrap nylon stockings or plant tape or foil around your stems. If your vine starts going to a pale color and feels squishy, your plant is already gone unfortunately. Also a deep yellow solo cup smeared with tangle foot goo kept close your plant stem can often catch the moths
Thanks for the video! Do you dilute the bt with water or Inject it straight ?
Interesting information. I believe that butternut squash (and others in that family) are not a food source of the vine borer, at least Waltham is not attacked by them.
My butternut is being attacked right now by the vine bore. I will try this
You can also use Hubbard squash as a trap crop. They prefer it over other varieties of squash and will be attracted to it.
An inch and a half up from the stem where they usually penetrate you should inject BT. It won't hurt your polinators, and it will kill the larvae. It works. Sounds crazy but if you dont want them, thatsba solution that works.
Hi Justin!! First time I’ve heard of this but Ive already got these critters in my new plants!!! Is Bonide brand ok and how do I dose so that I don’t turn my plants into literal bT?? Lol. Also how do I use this stuff on cucumbers, corn, etc??? You’re so very helpful to me being only a 3 year beginner.!!!
I lost 8 plants to em.. now I know at least - wait, is it possible to save them even if the borer has made a good nest but the plants still standing okay? I ordered some BT asap!
Would you do anything to treat the soil during the winter and before spring planting? Or is injecting BT once the plant's base is large enough the only remedy?
Can you plant other veggies, such as onions, tomatoes, carrots, etc., in the same bed/location without negative effects from the borers?
Is it too late once the squash wilted? It comes back with copious watering, but wilts again quickly. The other squash next to it are not wilting.
I just have a small garden and have lost a lot of squash to these things. Is there a way to kill them in the ground before they come out?
I've tried this and have a heck of a time getting the liquid in. Any tricks to that?
None of my local hardwares have this brand. Has anyone used other brands and had success? Also was the BT injected in concentrated form?
My question is when I go to order BT, how do I know that it won’t confused with something else?
Is this done as a preventative or as a treatment?
Do
I need to do this to n melons too? Someone said they will bore into them as well I’m about to loose everything 😢
Thank you! Every squash that starts to grow gets hollowed out in less than a few days! Not gonna happen anymore!
Hi,, when you take a squash off the plant are you twisting it off or pinching it off?
I did what you said in this video as soon as the plants were not absolutely tiny, but my squash are currently dead...the main stems of all 15 plants became mush and dried out. I tore open some of the more dead areas and found over a dozen living in a small area. No dead ones. Now I'm just building up dirt around every single area that can make roots to try and save the rest of it. I'm not sure what to do next year because this didn't work. I might just not plant at all because all that effort is not worth an entire four ripe squash.
How about using on gourd plants? I am a grower in SC. Last year I lost my arbor to this pest. I have two bottles of BT I purchased end of last season, to use this year. Any thoughts, I would be very much grateful
I grow white acre peas in my raised beds. Last year I got hit with a bug that laid eggs that turned into hundreds of worms. Had I not seen it on the plant as soon as they hatched, I’d have had no peas and no plants left. I sat and squished every one of those hundred or so worms. So glad I did. What can I prevent those with? Thanks
Will this work once the plant is already wilted?
So this is pure BT? You don't dilute it? I've seen videos where you mix it with water.
WOW!! I will have to do that for my squash!!! Thanks for the great tip!!!
I’m curious about the wood used in those raised beds. Is it pressure treated?
When do you start doing the injections? How old does the plant need to be? Also where do you get the needle? Thanks!
They got me 2 years ago, on my cucumbers and squash haven’t grown either since. I did hear about the BT solution, will try again this year.
This is a great tip that I utilized this year but what about spaghetti squash that I’ve got growing vertical. I’ve lost the plant to vine borers for a 3rd year in a row. They seem to be laying eggs all over the plant and then entering the plant at higher levels and I just can’t keep up.
I saw a svb on my pumpkins today. I see where I should inject the pumpkin about an inch and a half from the soil line. Should I also inject in the nodes along the vine?
The product you linked is a concentrated solution of B.T. Do you recommend it be diluted?
You can use the diluted version as well. It will work the same. : )
If you already have damage on your stems will this still work? I’m getting some fruit but plants are only about 30 days old.
Hi there! A NC friend shared your channel with me recently. I'm in SC. I've used BT in the past but this year I can't find it anywhere! The only thing I can find are products containing BT but with a lot of other ingredients that are toxic. What do you recommend? Sadly I am losing my squash plants left and right.
Hey there! Thanks for checking out the channel! I have a link in the description of this video for the BT I use. It's for organic gardening. Let me know if you can't find it.
@@skgreenhouse thanks so much!
Every single (seminole) pumpkin vine died last year, no pumpkins! I did get a butternut that almost matured and then I saw a tiny hole in the squash! UGH! I'm going to try again with your method - but how old/large should the vine be before beginning this treatment?
Why are you sterilizing the needle? Sterilizing from what, exactly?
I’m confused - I used the link and the info there said to spray it on! Which application is correct?
Do you use the concentrate full strength?
When you buy BT it specify if it’s concentrated or ready to mix! Just follow the directions. He’s actually showing the concentrated container, it needs to be diluted.
Can you tell me when to start doing this, I just transplanted my seedlings into my garden. I have then covered atm.
How often do I inject the stem with the BT?
That’s incredible thanks so much I will do this
It is now July 10 and down in Georgia I’ve lost every one of my squash plants. I had 15 plants. And planted I. Succession and those dang vine borers destroyed the 8 new plants I had growing in. Am I finished when it comes to getting any harvest out of squash? I feel like I can’t win. And I didn’t even get to harvest not a single bit of squash.
How thick should the stalk be to accommodate the BT solution
Hi. I attempted this early in the season before there was any evidence of borers, trying to be proactive, and (Black Beauty zucchini) the main stem was so hard the needle wouldn't penetrate, it was a large bore needle, and I got sprayed in the face. No way was it going in. So I tried injecting into some of the hollow leaf stems in the same area, hoping the Bt would run down the hollow stem and wind up where a larva might contact it. It killed the stem and leaf, a couple days later the place I injected was brown and shriveled and the leaf beyond it died. So, I couldn't be proactive, and now I have borers like crazy and they've killed about 90% of the Z. I'm trying to save what's left of it. I watched this video closely, and when you inject the base stem it looks like you have pruned off several leaves at the very base, does this create a softer area where you can inject? Do you try to inject where the cut-off leaf was attached to the base stem? And how do you smother eggs - neem oil? How often? I'm in central Iowa, most likely only one lifecycle of these things. I think. --thanks for your expertise