Cedarcide Lawn, Home & Garden Cedar Granules | Repels Fleas, Ticks, Ants & Mosquitoes | Smells Great, Easy to Use | Family & Pet Safe | 1 Bag (8 Lbs)






Key features
- •Treats up to 3,500 sq. ft.
- •Repels Pests
- •Non-Toxic
- •100% Natural
- •Satisfaction Guranteed
Cedarcide Lawn, Home & Garden Cedar Granules | Repels Fleas, Ticks, Ants & Mosquitoes | Smells Great, Easy to Use | Family & Pet Safe | 1 Bag (8 Lbs)
List Price: $75.66$68.09DEALYou Save: $7.57 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 24, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.3
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
40%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Attractive addition to your garden arsenal, great against fungus and blight. Airborne pests? Not so much.
ArtistEye✓ Verified Purchase•January 2, 2024
The CedarCide granules look very nice, and are keeping most pests off my tomatoes, at least all the crawling ones. CedarCide also seems to reduce blight and fungus. Last year I fought a losing battle. This year, I put down an even half inch of CedarCide, covering the entire garden bed where I am growing tomatoes and squash.
In my flower bed, where I did not have CedarCide, I lost some young nasturtiums and petunias. There are actual bites taken out of them! I have since added the cedar as top layer, but I'm afraid the nasturtiums and my herbs are also being eaten by flying critters such as cabbage moth caterpillers.
Also, obnoxious black gnats appeared on the tomato stems. My solution to that was a DIY pest and fungus spray: 2 TBSP CedarCide granules, 2 tsp tea tree oil, 2 tsp Dr. Bronner's Sals Suds, 1 peeled garlic clove, SHAKEN in a gallon of water and thoroughly applied with a sprayer. The flowers and herbs don't mind it, the tomatoes and squash seem happier. They are getting enormous.
UPDATE, LATE SUMMER, 2016
I lost every squash vine to vine borers. The cedar granules did nothing to keep the moths away or prevent the eggs from hatching. I also used neem oil, to no effect. Those vine borers are horrible. Healthy vines shrivelled to gray rags in 24 hours.
Unfortunately, Cedarcide doesn't seem to work against anything airborne. It's supposed to repel mosquitoes, too, but certainly doesn't keep them off me! I got bitten every time I worked in the garden. It's scary, because my area of Queens is the exact center of West Nile virus contagion in New York. I've aleady been sick with the symptoms.
But it was really helpful with cutting down fungus and mildew, especially when the rain back-splashed the tomato and pepper leaves.
UPDATE June 2017
This year, I am putting Cedarcide around my first strawberry and melon plants. Never tried to grow fruit before. I am now using Cedarcide to correct a BAD mistake. I had put down cocoa hulls as a mulch, because reviewers talked about how nice it smells. Unfortunately, it encourages, and even feeds funguses of all kinds "” white mold, gray mold, toadstools "” and inhibited the growth of ALL my plants! I had planted robust little tomatoes, peppers, strawberries, melons, nasturtiums, impatiens, and for a solid month they just sat there, drooping, no new leaves, some starting to die. The strawberries got moldy. It's been horrible. I wanted to cry. So ten days ago I decided to pull away the cocoa hulls and put down Cedarcide granules. Suddenly, the little guys are standing taller, putting out new leaves, and the strawberries even put out a few flowers. In ten days! I assume the Cedarcide is killing off the mold!
And here's one more use: I just bought fine-mesh lingerie bags with zippers, for laundry "” and I am filling them with Cedarcide and putting them in the closet where the winter coats and wool sweaters usually make a nice buffet for the moths. In an enclosed space, it smells quite strong; I am pretty sure I can say good-bye to the moths!
(Good-bye, moths.)
In my flower bed, where I did not have CedarCide, I lost some young nasturtiums and petunias. There are actual bites taken out of them! I have since added the cedar as top layer, but I'm afraid the nasturtiums and my herbs are also being eaten by flying critters such as cabbage moth caterpillers.
Also, obnoxious black gnats appeared on the tomato stems. My solution to that was a DIY pest and fungus spray: 2 TBSP CedarCide granules, 2 tsp tea tree oil, 2 tsp Dr. Bronner's Sals Suds, 1 peeled garlic clove, SHAKEN in a gallon of water and thoroughly applied with a sprayer. The flowers and herbs don't mind it, the tomatoes and squash seem happier. They are getting enormous.
UPDATE, LATE SUMMER, 2016
I lost every squash vine to vine borers. The cedar granules did nothing to keep the moths away or prevent the eggs from hatching. I also used neem oil, to no effect. Those vine borers are horrible. Healthy vines shrivelled to gray rags in 24 hours.
Unfortunately, Cedarcide doesn't seem to work against anything airborne. It's supposed to repel mosquitoes, too, but certainly doesn't keep them off me! I got bitten every time I worked in the garden. It's scary, because my area of Queens is the exact center of West Nile virus contagion in New York. I've aleady been sick with the symptoms.
But it was really helpful with cutting down fungus and mildew, especially when the rain back-splashed the tomato and pepper leaves.
UPDATE June 2017
This year, I am putting Cedarcide around my first strawberry and melon plants. Never tried to grow fruit before. I am now using Cedarcide to correct a BAD mistake. I had put down cocoa hulls as a mulch, because reviewers talked about how nice it smells. Unfortunately, it encourages, and even feeds funguses of all kinds "” white mold, gray mold, toadstools "” and inhibited the growth of ALL my plants! I had planted robust little tomatoes, peppers, strawberries, melons, nasturtiums, impatiens, and for a solid month they just sat there, drooping, no new leaves, some starting to die. The strawberries got moldy. It's been horrible. I wanted to cry. So ten days ago I decided to pull away the cocoa hulls and put down Cedarcide granules. Suddenly, the little guys are standing taller, putting out new leaves, and the strawberries even put out a few flowers. In ten days! I assume the Cedarcide is killing off the mold!
And here's one more use: I just bought fine-mesh lingerie bags with zippers, for laundry "” and I am filling them with Cedarcide and putting them in the closet where the winter coats and wool sweaters usually make a nice buffet for the moths. In an enclosed space, it smells quite strong; I am pretty sure I can say good-bye to the moths!
(Good-bye, moths.)
Keeps the gnats away
Monica Plitzko✓ Verified Purchase•December 10, 2023
Have started an indoor plant collection and was having issues with gnats. I have a tendency to overwater sometimes. Spreading this over the top of the soil helped eliminate the gnat problem. A little disappointed that there isn't more of a cedar smell, but if you stand close enough to the plants you an smell it.
SMELLS GREAT
ALMOST PERFECT✓ Verified Purchase•October 23, 2023
As soon as I began to spread the lawn down stairs with it, u can see a large swarm of mosquitoes fleeing my tiny apt at ONCE. It requires water to be effective so shortly after I sprinkled a nice layer all over the yard n on my porch it began to pour. It became even more effective.
Cedar
Ramona✓ Verified Purchase•October 4, 2023
So far it's kept insects away...except flies seem to attract to it more. Hopefully, they'll Ave as well. I got this because I have scorpions coming out regularly. It's seems to be working. Besides I like the cedar smell.
Actually keeps the fleas away!!!!!
JC✓ Verified Purchase•September 19, 2023
I didn't know if this worked before. I was actually skeptical. I have bought it because I wanted to keep something in the yard that doesn't keep washing away with the rain or that you need to keep spraying. This would ship thing actually works. The only problem is that the cat's in the yard use it as or litter box, and I need to keep adding more to the yard every week or two. But it has kept the fleas from the cats. And they don't scratch as much, or don't scratch at all. I love this product! I will buy more for the yard when I run out.
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