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#1
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Neem oil?
Tell us what you think about Neem oil.
Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? |
#2
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Neem oil?
In article ,
"Cereoid-UR12" wrote: Tell us what you think about Neem oil. Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? If you take a lovely hot bath in it, you get to smell like orange peelings all the way to the hospital! -- "Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher. "Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature. -from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers" See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/ |
#3
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Neem oil?
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#4
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Neem oil?
In Cereoid-UR12
wrote: Tell us what you think about Neem oil. Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? I'll swear by it. I've used it to wipe out powdery mildew (and other mystery ails) on azaleas, rust and black spot on roses and spider mites on fuschia to name a few. Last spring I was doing a weekly spray on some things and would usually have a few inches of the stuff left in my spray bottle when my hands got tired. I started tossing the leftover onto a crappy-looking red tip photinia way in the back and, wonder of wonders, within a couple of weeks the photinia was completely free of all of its usual ickiness and looking shiny and healthy. It's toxic to bees when it's wet, so I won't spray it on flowering shrubs. And it smells like the kitchen the morning after cooking up a tasty Indian meal to me. sam pnw/z8 |
#5
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Neem oil?
Put it this way... I actually thought to myself "How can I go about
buying an orchard to plant with Neem trees?" Honest to God, I think Neem oil is going to be a huge, HUGE aspect of modern gardening. A few months ago, when I first starting using it, I put out a post to this newsgroup asking folks advice on its use. I got ZERO responses, not a damn one. I was amazed that no one had anything to say about it. My experience so far with Neem oil has been fantastic. Not only has it been an effective pesticide against stubborn pests like aphids, but it has proven to be excellent as a fungicide as well. At the outset of the season, my hollyhocks were being mutilated by rust. After two applications of Neem oil, the new leaves are pristine and gorgeous. I didn't know hollyhocks could look so good. And my roses! Blackspot and rust have all but vanished! Last year, despite all my efforts, aphids ruled my garden. This year, only a few here and there. And the large population of ladybugs in my garden give me confidence that this isn't a wide-spectrum killer, irradicating everything in its path, friend or foe alike. In my experience, Neem oil is the best weapon to come down the pike in a long time. It may not cure all your gardening ailments, but it's definitely made a fan out of me. -Fleemo |
#6
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Neem oil?
"Cereoid-UR12" expounded:
Tell us what you think about Neem oil. Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? It was supposed to be effective against those damned lily beetles, but I don't think it did a thing. YMMV. -- Ann, Gardening in zone 6a Just south of Boston, MA ******************************** |
#7
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Neem oil?
It seems to upset the cycle of the damaging insect who pierces, sucks or chews
foliage with Neem Oil on it. They can't eat, then die. I have equal results with blasts of water on the undersides of leaves. I've never been able to get rid of thrips with it, which is the only reason I've used it. Instead, I let the lacewing larvae eat the thrips. As a fungicide, I think sulfur works much better in situations where humidity is prevalent. Where I live is on the dry line. We can be considered the humid south because of that. I've used Neem Oil on crape myrtles for powdery mildew with no results. None of my testing was scientific so I can't give definitive results other than to say, it didn't really help with thrips or mildew where I live. V On Sun, 18 May 2003 02:16:58 GMT, "Cereoid-UR12" wrote: Tell us what you think about Neem oil. Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? |
#8
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Neem oil?
Didn't do much when I was told to use it by a local nursery for a Japanese
Beetle infestation. The beetles eating the zinnias seemed completely unfazed. Maybe they all died horrible deaths 3 weeks later -- maybe not. The Neem Oil didn't act quickly enough in this particular instance. Never had to use it for fungal/mite issues, so can't comment on those. -- pelirojaroja "Cereoid-UR12" wrote in message .com... Tell us what you think about Neem oil. Its supposed to be an effective insecticide, miticide and fungicide all rolled into one and non-toxic to humans at the same time. Is it the wonder pesticide its touted to be or is it all hype? |
#9
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Neem oil?
In article , "pelirojaroja"
wrote: Didn't do much when I was told to use it by a local nursery for a Japanese Beetle infestation. The beetles eating the zinnias seemed completely unfazed. Maybe they all died horrible deaths 3 weeks later -- maybe not. The Neem Oil didn't act quickly enough in this particular instance. Never had to use it for fungal/mite issues, so can't comment on those. -- pelirojaroja Michigan State University & Cornel studies have incciated that Neem kills SOME beetle larvae that feed directly on a fully doused plant, or which feed on insects that feed directly on a plant (including ladybug larvae), but it does not kill adult beetles (including ladybug adults). It lowers beetle fertility rate (includuing ladybug fertility) so in the long run could lower overall beetle population (both harmful & beneficial types). It's just not very harmful to adult beetles, & even as a larvae-killer it has to get them at a delicate age & may require direct application with only a smothering effect. As an insecticide per se it is at best mediocre -- if it were otherwise, it'd would beneficial insects just as readily. MSU stated that it repelled but did not kill beetles, whereas soapy water did kill beetles (though only if the soapy water were sprayed directly on the beetle). The MSU study also showed that neem oil's effectiveness as a repellant lasted for ONE TO TWO DAYS; it did not show any systemic protection which is commonly alleged, though other studies do indicate a somewhat systemic effect of lowered insect fertility. It's stronger use is for certain kinds of very troublesome funguses like black spot, as shown in a separate Cornell study. I wouldn't use it for mere powdery mildew because even sneezing on powdery mildew arrests it, & tests at Cornell, Davis, & in Brazil have shown a milk spray both works better & has less likely to have unwanted side-effect (like killing lady beetle larvae or beneficial funguses), but for black-spot the milk spray didn't work & neem oil scored high ratings (as preventative soil-drench, not after-the-fact direct application to plants). It had not been thoroughly tested before it became popular in the west because frankly it reached our marketplace chiefly because it cost pennies per drum from India but could be repackaged to sell dearly to Americans & Aussies for extravagant profits. "Two thousand years of use in India!" seems to have been "test" enough. I think it's never going to be seriously indicted, but already some of its Magical Garden Benefits have been shown to be less effective than than soapy water (for aphids or beetles) or milk spray (for powedery mildew), & in the future other alleged super-uses will probably be shown to be only moderately effective. And even where it works, using gobs of it would not be good, though continued effectiveness could require reapplication as often as ever 48 hours! When the University of Washington study showedthat Neem lowered the fertility rate of the adult lady bugs, so that without killing the adult insect, it lowered the overall population of this garden helper, Green Light neem oil as of 2001 removed the azadirachtin from their product, which was thought to be the component that injured ladybugs -- but this ended any value for the neem oil controling any insect at all, so Green Light added pyrethrin to their neem brew to kill insects anyway. All other brands of neem still contain azadirachtin. It WILL lower the ladybug population (its effects on lowering the reproduction rate in many other beneficial insects is assumable though not yet studied, since on those species thus far studied the effects seems always to be present). Soil-drench treatment for funguses was studied at Montana State University, & without clear findings they suspected it was harmful to large ornamental shrubs, though whether from long-term absorption of repeat applications, or more likely due to destruction of beneficial funguses (which are extremely essential for tree & woody shrub health) was not established. They recommended using it only for small plants, plus warned the neem soil drenchings had little affect in alkaline soils. The idea that neem should be used for all things at all times, as often as possible, never struck me as a good idea. I see some people praising it like a wonder drug, & in many cases they are clearly just seeing what they want to see, not what is provably the case. In Asia Minor it is used in the form of neem sticks to clean teeth, it is in Asian mouthwashes & toothpastes, & in a great many entirely unproven herbal remedies recommended by herbal quacks in that unregulated industry. So a lot gets ingested without notable injury, though double-blind studies seeking potentially harmful effects seem not to exist, although a great many double-blind studies in India were orchestrated solely for the Neem industry's needs. This was already a powerful industry before their economic power skyrocketed thanks primarily to American & Australian gardeners' rather sudden & mainly unexpected delight in the stuff, & China's equally unexpected embracing it as an herbal remedy for internal use. So some of the studies prove antimicrobrial & fungicidal values & some potentially medicinal values, without really assessing possible risk, as the point is to extend the economic value, not actually to protect public health with any negative finding. There are "non profit" neem organizations throughout India that filter a combination of government & temple & industry monies to all kinds of projects just so long as they are oriented toward economic benifit. These non-profits tend to be run by people with PhDs in theology or psychology who want to promote "global goodness of Neem" even when putting all sorts of doctoral names on studies. If you wanted t o paint your naked body in dyed neem oil & hop round & round a stage flapping your arms to some tune written by Satjit Ray, a love-song for Kali personified as a Neem Tree, you could get funding for it in India. If you wanted to test possibly harmful side effects with a serious double-blind study, you'd be out of luck. Australia is joining the research-for-profits crowd & generating careless research in support of a new neem industry there, but I expect there'll also be some serious research with some real findings out of Australia as there can't so easily be out of India, where it would go even against Maha Devi the Great One to find out & reveal anything bad. Horticultural & entymologicial studies at numerous universities in the USA are presently under way. I'd expect these studies to find some bad & some good; some of them have already shown fewer values than alleged, or weaker values than older organic options. Some of the extant studies (in India) are so biased for the industry they'll never tell you that while some skin-care values can be shown with application of neem oil, they do not equal or exceed the equally smelly value of fish oil, basil oil, or motor oil, or that neem has the higher risk of irritation -- so the "proven" value is somewhat a statistical illusion. A few therapeutic uses have already been disproven, but not by any of the India studies. Another dubious study shows that neem oil kills mosquito larvae & lowers adult mosquito fertility, but the reality again is salad oil shares some of the effect; the study compared egg-hatching & wriggler survival in water treated with two different preparations of neem & compared that to water untreated with anything -- a basic India-style study the whole point of which is to help sell more Neem, ultimately "proved" only that neem works better than doing nothing, yet the study is the basis of marketing neem willynilkly for mosquito control. Because the neem tree is sacred to the Maha Devi, the Mother Goddess in India, magical & religious significance clouds clear judgement, & on top of that is the economic juggernaut of neem agribusiness. So it is used for cancer, arthritis, & smallpox with many other allegations of magical benifit. One infamous & preposterous study "proved" neem was as effective as a chief rival, Ginkgo biloba. At least, that was the finding after the study had been recast by herb peddlars. The study actually showed that both were as effective as placebo! A few credible studies do seem to support the idea that it is in the main harmless to people & pets. When rats were fed Neem in controlled tests, it never reached a toxic level, but rats actually gained weight with neem in their diet. It is believed POSSIBLY to have a contraceptive effect on mammals (on humans or one's champion terrier...) just as it does on some insects; it may be too harmful to sensitive larvae of beneficial insects & useful bacteria; allergic responses are a commonplace; & it is a potential hazard when it gets into wounds. -paghat the ratgirl -- "Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher. "Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature. -from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers" See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/ |
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