Thanks for watching our video on Ladybugs and Lacewings! Be sure to visit our website to learn more about how Beneficial Insects can help keep harmful chemicals out of your garden and do things Mother Nature's way. Learn More ➡️ organiccontrol.com/
Hello, is there a way to transfer the lacewing eggs? I accidentally found them sticking onto a mosquito blinds hanging infront of the door and the garden is 3ft away from it. I'm worry the eggs could be destroy if i touch them since those filaments look very flimsy.
However made this video deserves a raise. Loved it, especially the sound effects! I've just purchased 500 lacewing eggs in Australia. The company didn't sell Ladybugs and now I know why!
well that was unexpected like what a masterpiece for no reason lol so much fun to watch super informative and stunning footage.. loved it! am just a bit sad its so short
But lacewing larvae are really carnivorous. They eat everything they meet (their sibling eggs). They even eat butterflies eggs, monarch's eggs included.
if i was a gardener i would probably go Lacewings but even ladybugs arent as bad as those nightmare inducing wasps some farmers use, aphids suck but going all xenomorph on them is horrific.
and to say I accidentally created a new category of carnivorous A ( carnivore eats carnivore ) & carnivorous B ( vegen carnivours eat omnivours ) and X carnivours ( eats ALL, that mostly exist before dinasaurs )
I'm wondering the same thing. I've got naturally occurring ladybugs and I've released 2 lots of lacewing larvae into the same area, because that's where the aphids are. I keep checking, but I can only see ladybugs. No idea what happened to the lacewings. There are ladybug larvae and eggs everywhere and the ladybugs are still busy making more babies. I thought I might have seen one lacewing larvae covered in aphid corpses this morning, but now I can't find it. Very much hoping they are still alive. Perhaps they are just good at hiding.
The proper way is to spray sugar water on them so their leaves stick temporarily. Spray every week. This doesn't hurt them. I use ladybugs commercially for greenhouse grows and it's true that they fly away when food and water is not present. Their favorite food beside aphids and mites are raisins. Set a few next to a wet sponge and the ladybugs will hang around. Be wary of what you spray your plants with because you may repel ladybugs also. A great preventative spray safe for all plants is a couple tbsp each of vegetable oil and Dawn dish soap diluted in 1 gal water. Fill spray bottle and add 1 tsp rubbing alcohol and spray under leaves as well as on top. I use this as my primary spray for very expensive plants (😂) with great results. Queue the outrage comments about using rubbing alcohol on plants lol...
Thanks for watching our video on Ladybugs and Lacewings! Be sure to visit our website to learn more about how Beneficial Insects can help keep harmful chemicals out of your garden and do things Mother Nature's way. Learn More ➡️ organiccontrol.com/
Hello, is there a way to transfer the lacewing eggs? I accidentally found them sticking onto a mosquito blinds hanging infront of the door and the garden is 3ft away from it. I'm worry the eggs could be destroy if i touch them since those filaments look very flimsy.
@@MyRx777z Hi there! We recommend using a Q-Tip to transfer the Green Lacewing eggs.
However made this video deserves a raise. Loved it, especially the sound effects! I've just purchased 500 lacewing eggs in Australia. The company didn't sell Ladybugs and now I know why!
Right? This video is amazing and I love HD footage of bugs!
0:48
Insanely entertaining (and informative) video.
Thanks!
This was over the top, in a very good way xD
Jesus the production quality is off the charts
well that was unexpected like what a masterpiece for no reason lol so much fun to watch super informative and stunning footage.. loved it! am just a bit sad its so short
I once reared 4 ladybugs from egg to adult. They ate A LOT of aphids!
That's awesome!
Yup!.. Baby ladybug ( larva ) are the ones that consume aphid the mosts 0:48
This Video is Awesome! Fantastically well put together. whover did this did an absolutely amazing job!.
really informative video in such an easy to understand format! i learn more from this than any videos that are 20mins long
Glad it was helpful!
Top notch. I'd watch this even if I wasn't interested in gardening or insects!
But lacewing larvae are really carnivorous. They eat everything they meet (their sibling eggs). They even eat butterflies eggs, monarch's eggs included.
lol sound effects , love it. now im going to order laughed so much
Yeah, I chuckled at the "sawing" noise. = D
Superb documentation
I have both and I love the combination.
That's awesome! They definitely work very well together to get rid of those pesky aphids.
Brilliant video! 😄👌🏼
Plz more video upload for predators
New subscriber and I love it.
Thanks for subbing!
Thanks 👍
they look so cute and innocent. but you know they are going to eat you one way or another.
So cute! But deadly.
what is the name of the song that is played?
I got both but I see way mor me lacewings then lady bugs
Why dont you still make this?
0:08 Oh No! APHIDS!
Temperature recommendation for purchase and release?
Do the lacewing eggs kill the plants?
No, Green Lacewings do no kill plants.
if i was a gardener i would probably go Lacewings but even ladybugs arent as bad as those nightmare inducing wasps some farmers use, aphids suck but going all xenomorph on them is horrific.
Green Lacewings are definitely the way to go!
Luis Wing = Mosquitto + Hornet ( but does eating a vegetrian insects makes them vegetrian too? )
and to say I accidentally created a new category of carnivorous A ( carnivore eats carnivore ) & carnivorous B ( vegen carnivours eat omnivours ) and X carnivours ( eats ALL, that mostly exist before dinasaurs )
Wasp too!
Man, I didn't buy anything and these suckers are all over my garden. Oh yeah that's right I don't use poisonous chemicals in my garden.
Just use the stuff in the video damn chill. It's not chemicals 💀
does one eat the eggs or larve of the other?
lacewing larvae will it its own in some circumstances, they are that predatory. If you mean ladybug and lacewing, I am not sure.
I'm wondering the same thing. I've got naturally occurring ladybugs and I've released 2 lots of lacewing larvae into the same area, because that's where the aphids are. I keep checking, but I can only see ladybugs. No idea what happened to the lacewings. There are ladybug larvae and eggs everywhere and the ladybugs are still busy making more babies. I thought I might have seen one lacewing larvae covered in aphid corpses this morning, but now I can't find it. Very much hoping they are still alive. Perhaps they are just good at hiding.
Will adult ladybugs eat green lacewing larvae?
I heard insects are nearly blind & act like most preying mantises does, eat somethings that moves!
So egg doesnt move & I guess they're safe!
I heard that some people glue ladybug's wing in case of flying away.
Bae Seo young its really bad for them though! They can’t eat as much and it affects their offspring I heard
The proper way is to spray sugar water on them so their leaves stick temporarily. Spray every week. This doesn't hurt them. I use ladybugs commercially for greenhouse grows and it's true that they fly away when food and water is not present. Their favorite food beside aphids and mites are raisins. Set a few next to a wet sponge and the ladybugs will hang around. Be wary of what you spray your plants with because you may repel ladybugs also. A great preventative spray safe for all plants is a couple tbsp each of vegetable oil and Dawn dish soap diluted in 1 gal water. Fill spray bottle and add 1 tsp rubbing alcohol and spray under leaves as well as on top. I use this as my primary spray for very expensive plants (😂) with great results. Queue the outrage comments about using rubbing alcohol on plants lol...
@@sunnydaze7580 Thanks 4 the great info. Do you keep praying mantis' in your gardens?
thats called insect slavery, don't do that
both
Funny aphids can clone themselves over and over and over again!
Yes, they reproduce asexually, which makes them formidable garden pests!