
The Slugs are Winning
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- margo - newbie
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- Joined: Sat May 06, 2006 9:02 pm
- Location: Enfield
The Slugs are Winning
On Friday I planted out my Scarlet Runner Beans into the garden. I put down oyster shell all over the surrounding ground and set up beer traps. I have faithfully been on slug and snail patrol every few hours. Yesterday I noticed that a couple of leaves had been munched on so last night I crushed up eggshells as a further barrier to my succulent young plants. This morning every leaf looks like a doiley!
Instead of preventing slugs and snails it seems that the eggshells have encouraged them! What else can I do? I am reluctantly considering slug pellets. Your views and advice would be appreciated.

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- A selfsufficientish Regular
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Batfink, I too have tried EVERYTHING including midnight removal missions, grapefruit shells, grit, sand you name it. I do put all the ones I find in my compost bin. BUT...I have sprinkled a few pellets, as little as I can get away with to save my little plants.
I know it's bad, I hang my head lower than you in shame!
I know it's bad, I hang my head lower than you in shame!

- Millymollymandy
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- The Chili Monster
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How about (and this hurts) pouring beer over your weeds and let the slugs feast on your weeds?
"Rich, fatty foods are like destiny: they too, shape our ends." ~Author Unknown
Support Team "Trim Taut & Terrific"
Support Team "Trim Taut & Terrific"
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- margo - newbie
- Posts: 23
- Joined: Sat May 06, 2006 9:02 pm
- Location: Enfield
The Slugs are Winning
Thanks for all the advice. I have succumbed to slug pellets - organic ones. They are supposed to be harmless to all other wildlife. 

- Johnnie Appleseed
- margo - newbie
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 1:15 pm
- Location: Krefeld, Germany
Well, the slug pellets ordinarily all have bad influence on some other living beings and on the soil. Nevertheless, I also used them when I had a wood garden where I couldn't go take a look each day and where they came from anywhere, so beer traps and the kind wouldn't work.
But I found out about another method by accident. I just didn't test it properly yet, because I don't have a garden. It's easy: you need some twigs with fresh leaves (not dry), like from cutting the hedgerow. You put them around your garden, in a thick line or in little heaps, depending on the amount that you've got (if you got lots, perhaps better make sure it works and put several concentric heap rows or lines).
In the night the snails will look for food in your garden. With the sun rising, they'll be scared and hide in the nearest cool place- under your twigs. Now, get up whenever you like (they won't leave during daytime, at least as long as they risk dying), get a couple of your chickens or simply collect the beasts by yourself. Make them die in a non- chemical way!
But I found out about another method by accident. I just didn't test it properly yet, because I don't have a garden. It's easy: you need some twigs with fresh leaves (not dry), like from cutting the hedgerow. You put them around your garden, in a thick line or in little heaps, depending on the amount that you've got (if you got lots, perhaps better make sure it works and put several concentric heap rows or lines).
In the night the snails will look for food in your garden. With the sun rising, they'll be scared and hide in the nearest cool place- under your twigs. Now, get up whenever you like (they won't leave during daytime, at least as long as they risk dying), get a couple of your chickens or simply collect the beasts by yourself. Make them die in a non- chemical way!

- Andy Hamilton
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I tried some gel that I got from the local garden centre and it seems to be working. recently someone suggested using seaweed too, use it as a mulch, slugs hate it and it gives nutrients to your plants
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
- Muddypause
- A selfsufficientish Regular
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I wondering if I may have made a minor discovery about slugs. You see, my tiny back garden is now mostly a raised bed box, plus a normal ground-level bed next to it, plus a pathway next to them about three feet wide. Thing is, between making the raised bed, cutting back some overgrowth, and digging the other bed, I've pretty well eliminated all the grass even in the places it still can grow. I didn't intend to do this, I've just given it a very hard time lately, and it's all disappeared for the moment.
And I haven't seen a single slug this year, despite some lovely succulent shoots for them.
Now it may be that my copper-topped bed (see thread elsewhere) is working miracles, but I think the truth is, that there just aren't any slugs about. And I suppose this may be because there isn't any grass for them to live and breed in.
And I haven't seen a single slug this year, despite some lovely succulent shoots for them.
Now it may be that my copper-topped bed (see thread elsewhere) is working miracles, but I think the truth is, that there just aren't any slugs about. And I suppose this may be because there isn't any grass for them to live and breed in.
Stew
Ignorance is essential
Ignorance is essential
- Johnnie Appleseed
- margo - newbie
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- Joined: Mon May 08, 2006 1:15 pm
- Location: Krefeld, Germany