📋 Steps
1
Bt kurstaki for caterpillars — equivalent to synthetic
Bacillus thuringiensis kurstaki (DiPel, Thuricide) is OMRI-certified and completely equivalent to synthetic insecticides for caterpillar control when applied correctly. Kills only caterpillars (Lepidoptera). Apply in evening when caterpillars are feeding. Reapply after rain. No resistance concerns in garden populations.
2
Iron phosphate for slugs — the myth-buster
Iron phosphate bait (Sluggo) is OMRI-certified and more effective than most synthetic slug baits in head-to-head trials. It's not a compromise — it's genuinely the best available slug management option regardless of organic preference. Zero risk to pets, wildlife, or earthworms.
3
Spinosad for wide-spectrum insect control
Spinosad (Entrust, Monterey Garden Spray) is derived from soil bacteria and OMRI-certified. Effective against: thrips, caterpillars, leaf miners, fire ants, and more. More effective than many synthetic alternatives for some of these. The most powerful tool in the organic pest management toolkit.
4
Kaolin clay for physical protection
Kaolin clay (Surround WP) creates a physical film on plants that deters many insects — particularly flea beetles, leafhoppers, and cucumber beetles — without killing them. Reapply after rain. Excellent component in organic programs for preventing feeding and egg laying.
5
What's genuinely less effective organically
For certain pests, organic options are genuinely less effective: systemic insect control (imidacloprid can't be replaced with equal efficacy organically), aphid control at scale (soap requires more applications), and wood-boring beetle treatment (borates are organic-acceptable but less effective than fumigation for severe infestations). Know where the trade-offs are.
💡 Tips
- 'Organic' does not mean 'safe' — pyrethrin, rotenone, and copper fungicides are organic-approved but have significant toxicity profiles. Read organic labels as carefully as conventional ones
- Organic programs typically require more frequent applications and monitoring than conventional programs — the trade-off for reduced environmental impact is higher management intensity
- The most effective long-term pest management regardless of conventional vs organic orientation is IPM (Integrated Pest Management) — prevention first, then targeted intervention
- Biological controls (beneficial insects, predatory mites, parasitoid wasps) are the most sustainable component of organic programs — preserving beneficial insect populations is as important as pest control
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