New to this! Need opinions!

DancesWithWeeds

Well-Known Member
Looks like bite and suck spots. Look under the leaves for the culprit most of the time. A simple feather duster and some d.e. will kill anything that crawls on the plant and is completely safe to use. You can even spray off the plant in the morning if you have that kind of gusto.
You dust DE on with a feather duster? That sounds a little better than how I do it. I mix a 4 tablespoons to a gallon of water and spray. Problem with spraying is it accumulates in spots and also runs down to the leaf tips. Dusting with a feather duster might be a lot better. It would probably be a more even covering. But don't breath the dust.
 

ProPheT 216

Well-Known Member
You dust DE on with a feather duster? That sounds a little better than how I do it. I mix a 4 tablespoons to a gallon of water and spray. Problem with spraying is it accumulates in spots and also runs down to the leaf tips. Dusting with a feather duster might be a lot better. It would probably be a more even covering. But don't breath the dust.
The dust can't hurt you and getting it wet makes it ineffective and clump up
 

DancesWithWeeds

Well-Known Member
The dust can't hurt you and getting it wet makes it ineffective and clump up
The dust CAN hurt you. Get it in your lungs.

"If inhaled too much or for long periods of time the tiny crystals can become lodged within the walls of the lungs causing irritation and also a restriction of oxygen to the body.

This was also deemed a disease known as...wait for it...wait for it
"pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" "

In other words, you shouldn't breath the stuff.
 

big bud man 413

Well-Known Member
The dust CAN hurt you. Get it in your lungs.

"If inhaled too much or for long periods of time the tiny crystals can become lodged within the walls of the lungs causing irritation and also a restriction of oxygen to the body.

This was also deemed a disease known as...wait for it...wait for it
"pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis" "

In other words, you shouldn't breath the stuff.
It's chronic?
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
That one word is like a whole sentence:
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis
pneumono ultra microscopic silico volcanoconiosis

If you start fron the end of the word and work your way to the front you'll find it's about 4 or 5 words cramed together. If I can't say I sure as hell don't want to catch it.
This is usually referring to the disease specifically from volcano sourced silica. Everyone else usually just calls it silicosis (close enough) but bad stuff.
 

DancesWithWeeds

Well-Known Member
How do you know if you have it?
This is what the word means:
Pneumono refers to the lung. Ultra means extremely, microscopic means tiny, silica is sand, volcano is self-evident, and coniosis is scarring. Put them all together and you have what the OED recognizes as the longest word in the English language, pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.

From what I've read about it's kind of like walking pneumonia. Probably about like any COPD condition. I've googled for symptoms but they are hard to find.
 

DancesWithWeeds

Well-Known Member
@curious2garden said I have the wrong word here, but I'd bet the results are the same. You get stuff in your lungs that doesn't come out.

If I'm using it outside I stand up wind. When using it in the lab as C-Lite for filtering I use a dust mask while building the filter.
 

hotrodharley

Well-Known Member
You dust DE on with a feather duster? That sounds a little better than how I do it. I mix a 4 tablespoons to a gallon of water and spray. Problem with spraying is it accumulates in spots and also runs down to the leaf tips. Dusting with a feather duster might be a lot better. It would probably be a more even covering. But don't breath the dust.
Add a drop of liquid soap to keep it on the leaves better. Acts as a surfactant.
 

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
@curious2garden said I have the wrong word here, but I'd bet the results are the same. You get stuff in your lungs that doesn't come out.

If I'm using it outside I stand up wind. When using it in the lab as C-Lite for filtering I use a dust mask while building the filter.
Pneumonovolcanosilicosis is from silicosis cause by silica from volcanic ash (silicon dioxide)

Silicosis is the more general lung disease caused by silica (of any source).

My father died secondary to Silicosis from damage done to his lungs when he was a young hard rock miner. Although he left the profession at 19 it had damaged his lungs so badly that later in life it was partially responsible. So please whatever you call it use a mask when handling DE, or perlite or any dust.
 

Jeffislovinlife

Well-Known Member
I have 4 females, and now 2 males. I pollinated the females! Now I’m seeing some thing come up in the leaves of my plants and I don’t know what it all is! Couple different pictures! What are your thoughts!? They’re outdoors, but more that partially but less than fully screened in, with polycarbonate panels above.
First off welcome to Riu and that last picture sure looks like 1690631680638312157344.jpg
 

DancesWithWeeds

Well-Known Member
Pneumonovolcanosilicosis is from silicosis cause by silica from volcanic ash (silicon dioxide)

Silicosis is the more general lung disease caused by silica (of any source).

My father died secondary to Silicosis from damage done to his lungs when he was a young hard rock miner. Although he left the profession at 19 it had damaged his lungs so badly that later in life it was partially responsible. So please whatever you call it use a mask when handling DE, or perlite or any dust.
Thanks for clearing that up. Somewhere I got of course on googling it. But the word is impressive, and a bit scary.
 
Top