I had a half bag of FFOF last run that was sealed with a twist tie in my closet. It was sealed for a couple months. FFOF is moist in the bag. There were baby gnats crawling out within a few days of opening the bag and I had it folded over, just not completely airtight. It's happened multiple times with new bags during winter when there were no flyers in the neighborhood. I firmly believe that media can and often is contaminated with gnat eggs. I'm fairly certain the eggs can stay viable for at least several months in a somewhat moist substrate. I plan on going Coco soon as I can afford to but I figure after seeing this that ill have to heat it like the FFOF, just to be sure. This year has had fkn Kryptonian fungus gnats lol.After re potting that plant and seeing gnats it made me think there's probably gnats in the medium...there's deffo not, tbh I think it's too dry but that aside I'm testing it?
On that day last week I put some of the new coco into a clear bag and nothing has hatched yet?
At the same time I opened up this one and put in a bag with space around it no fresh coco.
View attachment 5439450
Holy fk 2/3 days later frickin gnats...it confirms to me gnats can last 5/6 weeks without hatching?
To be sure and avoid doubt I sealed these wks back they've not been opened at all.
View attachment 5439453
View attachment 5439454
It's physically impossible to get in/out there and gnats were still hatching up to last week.
Are fungus gnats inter dimensional beings?It's physically impossible to get in/out there and gnats were still hatching up to last week.
By the way, the cheapest place I’ve found rice hulls, was from online beer-brewery-supply stores.I use FFOF, Roots Organic etc. Many times, they seem to come with built-in gnats. It's pretty common, I think.
I have been top dressing my containers with rice hulls to keep the top layer of soil from drying out and also as a preventative to gnats. The rice hulls allow water to pass over them quickly and then they dry out right away and that dry layer on top seems to deter gnats from emerging. And, the upper soil layer stays more in equilibrium with the rest of the soil in the container.
I explained in a previous post what to do before using your medium to kill larvae and eggs. Athena IPM or Lost Coast Plant Therapy (very expensive) are the handful of insecticides that you can use to do a soil soak.Is anyone aware these things can stay dormant in dry soil and maybe drybrick coco for a “long” time? Shoot. Anyone know how long exactly? Best way to kill them before using it? Im in dtw coco I dont think I can bake it but willing to, probably wont smell bad its just coco. Could get some athena or captain somethin Il have to look back.