These are thrips, aren't they.

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While I disagree with Bill’s conclusion jumping, the BioAdvanced (Bayer) products, such as the 3-in-1 Insect, Disease, & Mite Control, are pretty good, generally easily gotten, and relatively odor-free.

I have gotten lucky with an extended summer this year and my plants are still outside - it’s supposed to be in the 80’s tomorrow - but I do thorough treatments with OrganiShield, as they can come in any day now. It has a very mild scent and kills adults, juveniles, and eggs on contact.

UFL extension field guide to thrips
 
While I disagree with Bill’s conclusion jumping, the BioAdvanced (Bayer) products, such as the 3-in-1 Insect, Disease, & Mite Control, are pretty good, generally easily gotten, and relatively odor-free.

I have gotten lucky with an extended summer this year and my plants are still outside - it’s supposed to be in the 80’s tomorrow - but I do thorough treatments with OrganiShield, as they can come in any day now. It has a very mild scent and kills adults, juveniles, and eggs on contact.

UFL extension field guide to thrips
That sounds lovely, as we have snow on the ground here already!
Thank you for the recommendations and the reading!
 
BioAdvanced (Bayer) products, such as the 3-in-1 Insect, Disease, & Mite Control, are pretty good,
Bayer 3-in-1 is very good indeed...a systemic insecticide, it will continue to kill insects for months. I have been using it on orchids and garden plants for years, but I also rotate it with other insecticides.
PS, when you spray insecticides(indoor or outdoor), please wear a mask, gloves, long pants, and a long-sleeve shirt, basically you should cover yourself from head to toe, especially for pregnant women(but not recommended). if it is for indoor spraying, turn off the fans before you do that(you can turn it back on after spraying), and don't come back till the plants are all dry(some products recommend 24 hrs for greenhouse).
 
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You've gotten a lot of good advice here, so I'll try not to repeat too much, but I'm personally a fan of using soap just because I don't want to spray harsh chemicals indoors. I had thrips on some Nepenthes pitcher plants a few years ago which I treated with soapy water. Just a few drops of palmolive dish soap in a 500ish mL spray bottle with distilled/ RO water. I drenched the plant twice a week with this soapy solution and treated for about a month and a half. Seemed to do the trick, but the catch is you need to be consistent and thorough.
 
You've gotten a lot of good advice here, so I'll try not to repeat too much, but I'm personally a fan of using soap just because I don't want to spray harsh chemicals indoors. I had thrips on some Nepenthes pitcher plants a few years ago which I treated with soapy water. Just a few drops of palmolive dish soap in a 500ish mL spray bottle with distilled/ RO water. I drenched the plant twice a week with this soapy solution and treated for about a month and a half. Seemed to do the trick, but the catch is you need to be consistent and thorough.
Also a good idea! And very simple. If I'm treating regularly anyway something like this might work no problem
 
Wow! I totally missed the pregnant part. Congratulations.

In that case, I definitely recommend the OrganiShield, as it is not a toxin at all. It is a “super surfactant” that strips protective layers off any soft-bodied insect or mite, including juveniles and eggs, leading to a quick death. It has limited residual-, and no systemic effect, so must come into direct contact the pest, but being safe to use, repetition is easy. I keep a quart spray bottle of solution on hand for spot treatments, as needed.

I have a lot of honey bees visiting my plantings, and it has no effect on them. The active ingredient is approved for killing varroa mites in beehives.
 
Wow! I totally missed the pregnant part. Congratulations.

In that case, I definitely recommend the OrganiShield, as it is not a toxin at all. It is a “super surfactant” that strips protective layers off any soft-bodied insect or mite, including juveniles and eggs, leading to a quick death. It has no systemic effect, so must come into direct contact the pest, but being safe to use, repetition is easy. I keep a quart spray bottle of solution on hand for spot treatments, as needed.

I have a lot of honey bees visiting my plantings, and it has no effect on them. The active ingredient is approved for killing varroa mites in beehives.
Haha thank you!

Okay, that is great to know! It would be a weekly treatment at this point?
 
Haha thank you!

Okay, that is great to know! It would be a weekly treatment at this point?
Yeah. Three thorough treatments at one-week intervals should do it.

I generally use 1 ounce/gallon, but if the bugs are really bad, doubling that is fine.
 
I fought thrips for a year trying different things. Most suppress only. I decided, because they move from plant to plant and thereby spread virus, to go for the big gun. St. Augustine OS has the pest/disease charts on what to use. Overture 35 WP is systemic, and is specific for thrips and caterpillars alone. I can tell you, it works! Two applications 14-28 days apart are recommended. It took care of it and the best part is it’s labeled as CAUTION, the lowest level of toxicity for a chemical. Now I make sure they don’t affect blooms ever again—I spritz each time buds break the sheath. If you look at my other thread on this, you will see the only negative is you must buy it in far greater volume than you need. It was worth it to me to eradicate thrips. I’d be happy to share 2oz with you at my cost. PM me if you are interested.
 
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I suddenly have 5 phrags with signs of damage.

And if they're not thrips, what are they?

I'm ready to nuke em, the only problem being that I am first-trimester pregnant and that complicates chemical exposure and I need to be extra careful. I am not above making my husband suit up and apply something though. Recommendations?? Thank you!
I’m fine doing this pretty much every time I water, which is about twice a week. I could put some alcohol in a small spray bottle to make it easier and spray from all angles until it’s almost dripping off the leaves would that work? I can keep it up for at least a month.
 
I’m fine doing this pretty much every time I water, which is about twice a week. I could put some alcohol in a small spray bottle to make it easier and spray from all angles until it’s almost dripping off the leaves would that work? I can keep it up for at least a month.
You might cool the leaves too much as the excess alcohol evaporates, Especially on finer leaved plants.
 

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