Catnip as repellent- Myth?
manillesol
16 years ago
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manillesol
16 years agoRelated Discussions
Wanted: Fleabane, Pennyroyal, Catnip, and/or mosquito plant
Comments (0)Does anyone have any fleabane, pennyroyal, catnip or mosquito plant seeds? If so, I'd love to trade! I've heard that these plants repel fleas and/or mosquitoes and thought they'd make a GREAT addition to my yard since I have SO MANY mosquitoes. I'm thinking of building a bat house, too, but that is a subject for a different forum! :) Thanks, J...See More'MythBusters Challenge' - Azatrol vs. Take Down Garden Spray
Comments (3)Holy moley - the psyllids have really done a number on your tomatoes. :( Most of mine are looking increasingly bad, but they're not quiet as affected as yours look to be. Keep us posted on the insecticide trial. I have a bed of tomatoes that went in much later than the rest, and consequently have been largely untouched, that could benefit from whatever you find out with the batch of plants you're using that stuff on now, and the plants that you'll be planting out soon. Also, from what I've read, although the psyllids will feed on the pepper plants, they don't seem to do near as much damage to them as they do the tomatoes, so the plants should be able to hold up....See MoreCatnip used as Pest Repellent
Comments (22)Thanks to Alfie for clarifying the difference between catmint and catnip; saved me the trouble! Since I have to fence my catnip to allow it to survive the depredations of my own and the neighborhood cats, I have but one plant. However, since the cats care nothing for lemon catnip, and because it self-sows with the same gleeful abandon as the regular sort, and because I much prefer its aroma and taste in tea to the standard (which to me smells like skunk, although I confess I do not find that scent--at a reasonable distance!--terribly off-putting), I have masses of that around, duking it out in one wild corner with the lemon balm, equally enthusiastically self-sowing calendula, and several mullein plants that I encourage for their medicinal properties as well. ANYhow--my point is this: if plain ol' catnip is a good 'skeeter repellent, seems my lemon catnip would be even better, as it has that citronella-like scent, same as lemon balm. We, happily, have not too many mosquitoes this year, but I will sure give it a try tomorrow for the ravenous black flies that have plagued our area the last couple of summers. I have little hope, though, since the lemon balm did not faze them...CK...See MoreCats don't like catnip?
Comments (15)My kitty Salem is a year old now I believe (I need to check the calendar). A few months ago he didn't care for catnip at all, until about a month ago. I snipped a piece, put it in his face and he went nuts! Then he didn't want it anymore. But now, I've caught him laying all over it. He just loves it. Fortunately he doesn't bite it, he only smashes it. I'll be prunning it soon. So maybe I'll save the clippings and let them dry. I'm not sure what affect the dry catnip with have on him. He's insane! He just pulled a "spiderman." I have cages over my strawberry plants to protect them from him (he lays all over the plants), and he likes to jump on the cages. We'll he just found out I'm at the computer (he heard me through the window), so he jumped on one of the cages and took a flying leap and jumped onto the window screen and hung there like Spidy! Now I have 6 holes in my screen...nice! He's insane! I'm just glad he hasn't taken a liking to my Lemon Grass. Tania ~_~...See Morebetzie_fab
16 years agomanillesol
16 years agoZoltan Baint
7 years agoStacy Storkamp
6 years agoSandy Lang
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