Product Label

Apply when pollinators are not present
*listed
+ Not for use in California
SPRAY
Adjust nozzle to stream or spray position.
Point sprayer downward and squeeze
trier repeatedly until liquid is released.
AFTER USE
Turn sprayer nozzle to X (off) position.
Do not unplug hose.
Return sprayer to bottle. Sprayer will
snap into place.
ATTACH SPRAYER
Remove sprayer from bottle. Remove twist tie.
Pull down and extend hose.
Open flip-cap on bottle.
Insert hose and plug into flip-cap opening
until it snaps into place.
Grasshoppers
Gypsy (spongy) moth larvae
Japanese beetles (adult)+
Kudzu bug
Lace bugs
Leaf-feeding beetles
Leaf-feeding caterpillars
Leafhoppers
Leafminers (including Birch
Leafminers and Holly
Leafminers)
Leafrollers
Loopers
Mealybugs (including citrus
mealybug, striped mealybug)
Millipedes
Pillbugs
Pine shoot beetle (adult)
Plant bugs
Plant hoppers
Plant Mites (including broad
mites, clover mites, European
red mites, pecan leaf scorch
mite)
Psyllids+ (including boxwood
psyllid, Ficus leaf psyllid, fig
psyllid, hackberry psyllid,
sumac psyllid, willow psyllid)
Rose Midges
Rose Slugs
Sawflies
INSECTS AND MITES KILLED
CONTROLS LISTED DISEASES
People & pets may enter the area after the spray has dried.
Black Spot
Powdery Mildew
RESTRICTIONS
Do not apply this product while bees are foraging.
Do not wet the foliage within four hours after applying.
To avoid serious damage to plants, treat pests early in the season before
they multiply.
Rust
Scab
Leaf Spot
Anthracnose
Petal Blight
APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS
FOR BEST RESULTS
Apply until both sides of the leaves are evenly coated with spray, but not
dripping, at a rate of 3 fl oz per 10 sq. ft. One 1 gal bottle should cover
436 sq. ft, or approximately 16 rose bushes
(each 5 ft by 5 ft). To treat existing
disease: apply at least 3 times, every 14 days apart beginning at the first sign
of disease. To prevent diseases: apply at least 3 times, every 14 days apart
during the growing season, starting when new leaves first appear.
Adelgids+
Ants~ including pavement ants,
acrobat ant, big headed ant, crazy
ant, corn field ant, odorous house
ant, little black ant, leaf cutter ants
~(excluding fire, harvester,
pharaoh, and carpenter ants)
Aphids (including crape myrtle aphid,
green peach aphid, rose aphid)
Armyworms
Bagworms
Beetles+
Boxelder bugs
Budworms
Brown soft scales
Cankerworms
Caterpillars
Chinch bugs
Crickets (including field crickets,
house crickets)
Cucumber beetles (including striped
cucumber beetle, spotted
cucumber beetle)
Cutworms
Diaprepes (adult)
Earwigs
Elm leaf beetles
Fall webworms
Firebrats
Flea beetles
Fungus gnats (adult)
Scale insects (crawler stages
including California red scale,
pine needle scale, San Jose
scale, tea scale)
Silverfish
Sowbugs
Spiders (excluding black
widow, hobo and brown
recluse)
Spider mites
Spittlebugs+
Stink bugs (including brown
marmorated stink bug,
southern green stink bug)
Tarnished plant bugs
Tent caterpillar
Thrips (including citrus thrips,
onion thrips, Western
flower thrips)
Tip moths
Treehoppers+
Twig borers
Viburnum leaf beetle
Webworms
Weevils including adult root
weevils, black vine weevil,
orchard weevil, Pecan
weevil
Whiteflies (including crown
whiteflies, silverleaf
whiteflies, sweet potato
whiteflies, tobacco
whiteflies)