Posted by Ellie Bentley on August 7, 2006, 5:17 am
Hi.
At 11pm last night we outside with bucket, torch, and forceps to see
what slugs we might catch. We were ASTOUNDED. Yesterday this valley in
western mid-Wales had its first rain since early June (yes, we've lost
several cherished shrubs owing to the dryness of the earth). We had
felt that the two months of no rain would have massively reduced the
slug population. But, no, the garden was alive with literally 100s of
slugs AND snails, of many different sub-species. After an hour we
became tired with the bending over and plucking from ground and decided
we had made a fair killing. The household bucket, filled with warm
soapy water, was one third full of slugs and snails. We walked 200
yards into the middle of an adjacent field and dumped them - one great
horrible wriggling gelatious mess about 16" in diameter and an inch or
so thick! Ugh!
Most interestingly the greatest concentrations of slugs and snails were
around the blue slug pellets we had put down yesterday afternoon, just
before the rain. Wherever there were pellets there were up to half a
dozen snails and slugs, some up to three inches long, all entertwined,
copulating, feeding, and, hopefully, dying. We use the slug pellets
which are safe for children/cats/birds, which activate only when wet,
and which break down to form a natural fertilizer . . . BUT they ARE
expensive.
We have read that putting lots of pine needles all over your garden
deters the blighters. How effective is this? Has anyone tried it?
We've also read that slugs and snails LOVE oat bran but it swells up
inside them and kills them. Has anyone tried this, and is this
effective and practical?
Best Wishes,
Ellie.
Posted by 1ce on August 7, 2006, 2:03 pm
On Mon, 07 Aug 2006 10:17:52 +0100, Ellie Bentley
>Hi.
>At 11pm last night we outside with bucket, torch, and forceps to see
>what slugs we might catch. We were ASTOUNDED. Yesterday this valley in
>western mid-Wales had its first rain since early June (yes, we've lost
>several cherished shrubs owing to the dryness of the earth). We had
>felt that the two months of no rain would have massively reduced the
>slug population. But, no, the garden was alive with literally 100s of
>slugs AND snails, of many different sub-species. After an hour we
>became tired with the bending over and plucking from ground and decided
>we had made a fair killing. The household bucket, filled with warm
>soapy water, was one third full of slugs and snails. We walked 200
>yards into the middle of an adjacent field and dumped them - one great
>horrible wriggling gelatious mess about 16" in diameter and an inch or
>so thick! Ugh!
Stupid fat slug. Shame we cant do the same to old sows like you.
Jim Webster,Barrow-in-Furness farmer,troll & president of Cumbria CLA.
would you let your children near this person? see
http://tinyurl.com/kgbnf
now in the sixth year of raving about Pat Gardiner and
still no result.
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into disrepute? Why not contact us at
Country Land and Business Association
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Posted by Ellie Bentley on August 8, 2006, 10:17 am
1ce wrote:
> Stupid fat slug. Shame we cant do the same to old sows like you.
1ce, I am neither old nor a sow. You however are either no enthusiastic
gardener of any proportion or an individual totally incapable of empathy
with gardeners who work in wet slug-infested areas of the country.
Don't bother to reply. You won't be read by me.
Posted by Farm1 on August 8, 2006, 4:16 am
> We've also read that slugs and snails LOVE oat bran but it swells up
> inside them and kills them. Has anyone tried this, and is this
> effective and practical?
I have mixed antipodean and European slugs (and European snails) and
I've found that stale beer in saucers or any of the yeast based toast
spreads like Marmite/Promite/Vegemite mixed with water to a soup or
cornflakes and Derris Dust mixed together and moistended works on
them.
Posted by Ellie Bentley on August 8, 2006, 10:08 am
Farm1 wrote:
> I have mixed antipodean and European slugs (and European snails) and
> I've found that stale beer in saucers or any of the yeast based toast
> spreads like Marmite/Promite/Vegemite mixed with water to a soup or
> cornflakes and Derris Dust mixed together and moistended works on
> them.
Thanks, Farm1.
I'm trying to avoid saucers/containers of beer/granules being visible
all around the garden, if possible, though, yes, many people say
drowning them in beer is effective.
Re. Marmite etc, last night I crunched up bran flakes and spread them
around and this morning found the cats at them! I know they love
Marmite etc., so we'll have to avoid this option.
What is Derris Dust, please. (The cornflakes will be cheap enough.)
Ellie.
>At 11pm last night we outside with bucket, torch, and forceps to see
>what slugs we might catch. We were ASTOUNDED. Yesterday this valley in
>western mid-Wales had its first rain since early June (yes, we've lost
>several cherished shrubs owing to the dryness of the earth). We had
>felt that the two months of no rain would have massively reduced the
>slug population. But, no, the garden was alive with literally 100s of
>slugs AND snails, of many different sub-species. After an hour we
>became tired with the bending over and plucking from ground and decided
>we had made a fair killing. The household bucket, filled with warm
>soapy water, was one third full of slugs and snails. We walked 200
>yards into the middle of an adjacent field and dumped them - one great
>horrible wriggling gelatious mess about 16" in diameter and an inch or
>so thick! Ugh!