DONT GO IN YOUR GARDEN WITH A FLASHLIGHT WHEN FLOWERING!@
BT bacteria I can vouch for, beauvaria fungus also..Spinosad in veg, too late for that now to spray most likely. Use trichoderma Harzianum in your spray mixture to colonize the plant, also there are other bacteria and fungi you can colonize the plant with in the tiny window you have left for spraying, this to prevent any spores germinating and infecting your plants further. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, the bugs are your main botritus contamination vector, you have to start with the moms and in veg with a complete IPM to prevent most troubles in flower. Your options now are very limited. Also beneficial insects can and do work, you can purchase them retail now around the world.. They dont in my experience work as a complete preventative, but as a spot treatment and flower preventative they are worth their weight in gold, actually at what they cost they are worth more! LOL...
Wait till temps start dropping late season and humidity starts climbing, and the thrip larvae start hatching and munching in the middle of your top colas...whoa boy...bot city! One thing to remember also is botritus overwinters normally as truffles in the soil so treat or disinfect old soil/medium thoroughly before using again, or toss far away or burn and DO NOT toss rotten botritus buds into the compost pile, burn in a bonfire!
BT bacteria I can vouch for, beauvaria fungus also..Spinosad in veg, too late for that now to spray most likely. Use trichoderma Harzianum in your spray mixture to colonize the plant, also there are other bacteria and fungi you can colonize the plant with in the tiny window you have left for spraying, this to prevent any spores germinating and infecting your plants further. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, the bugs are your main botritus contamination vector, you have to start with the moms and in veg with a complete IPM to prevent most troubles in flower. Your options now are very limited. Also beneficial insects can and do work, you can purchase them retail now around the world.. They dont in my experience work as a complete preventative, but as a spot treatment and flower preventative they are worth their weight in gold, actually at what they cost they are worth more! LOL...
Wait till temps start dropping late season and humidity starts climbing, and the thrip larvae start hatching and munching in the middle of your top colas...whoa boy...bot city! One thing to remember also is botritus overwinters normally as truffles in the soil so treat or disinfect old soil/medium thoroughly before using again, or toss far away or burn and DO NOT toss rotten botritus buds into the compost pile, burn in a bonfire!