
Japanese beetles
Half-inch metallic green and copper beetles, often in clumps of 5 to 20 on a single plant. Active on warm sunny mornings from late June through August across the eastern and midwestern US. They feed openly on top of leaves, not hidden underneath.
Skeletonized leaves where the soft tissue is chewed away and only the lacy network of veins is left. A patch of basil can go from full leaves to bare ribs in 2 to 3 days during peak emergence. Beetles attract more beetles through pheromones, so small infestations escalate fast.
Hand-pick into soapy water at dawn
Fill a wide jar with soapy water (a few drops of dish soap per cup).
Walk the bed at dawn while beetles are still cold and sluggish. Hold the jar under a cluster and tap or knock the leaves. Beetles drop straight in and can't fly out.
Repeat every morning through the 4 to 6 week emergence window. Daily removal stops the pheromone signal that pulls in more beetles.
Spinosad spray on opposite leaves at dusk
Spray Spinosad (Captain Jack's Deadbug Brew or Monterey Garden Insect Spray, ~$12 to $15) on the tops and undersides of leaves at dusk. Spinosad is approved for edibles and breaks down in sunlight, so dusk timing matters. Reapply every 7 days through July and August. Wait 1 day before harvesting.
Skip Japanese beetle pheromone traps
The bag traps sold at garden centers attract more beetles to your yard than they catch. They pull beetles in from a wider radius and concentrate damage on the basil and roses near the trap. Hand-picking and Spinosad are far more effective.



