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As a keen armature gardener, I was wondering if anyone has any advice on how to get rid of pests on plants, such as Green/Black fly and Vine Weevils and there larvae without harming or killing them.
I have been told there is a chemical that will destroy the Vine Weevils larvae before the develop in to full Vine Weevils and eat and destroy the plants and the same for the Green/Black Fly.
But a Buddhist practiser I have taken a vow of no killing and I garden organically to help the balance of the environment, so using chemicals to eradicate the Vine Weevils, Green/Black Fly is unacceptable.
So if anyone has got any advice that would or could help me garden ethically and without having to use chemicals which would cause harm or even kill any insects or pests would be really appreciated.
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Comments
If your practice is sufficiently developed, you can ask problem insects to leave by chanting mantra to them . . .
Another approach is to plant unusual, high resistant plants. So some plants are favoured or unfavouvered by insects. Birds will help you out but the killing might be too much for you. How do you dig the soil without mass killing?
Good luck. Be kind even to the rain . . . :wave:
om mani ped me hum
Everything is so sanitary, so perfect.... the lines calculated to look 100% natural - every artifice looks as if it has been in place - for ever.....
How much attention was paid, intensely, I wonder, to the care and consideration for the creatures encountered? Was their well-being factored into the meticulous equations?
I think not.
Odd though, that we should be so fastidious with regard to the care, attention and well-being of an insentient object (the plant) yet occasionally care less for a creature (the insect) that may arguably be said to be more so....
A mature garden is a complex ecosystem - by gardening, it is inevitable that one affects the ecosystem in typical ways.
The best of chance of not killing is probably not gardening.
Even if one 'gets rid' of a pest by say washing with water, the pest will probably die as it is displaced from its environment.
Any intervention has a cascading effect.