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A.T. Wichne
Slugs and snails are the bane of many
gardeners' lives, ripping at slow speed through
a garden, destroying young plants under the
cover of darkness. It's not unusual to find a
whole row of seedlings fatally damaged in one
sitting, and even a single snail can cause
devastation. Bearing this in mind, it's pretty
obvious that many gardeners develop a distinct
antipathy towards our mollusc friends and will
try almost anything to rid their gardens of the
invertebrate menace.
The traditional answer to the snail and slug
problem was to use pellets, which contained
toxins which would kill the creatures after
they consume them. For many reasons, this is
less than a perfect solution, as the pellets
can also be very dangerous for wildlife, pets,
and even children. Not only can the pellets
themselves cause poisoning, the slugs and
snails become poisonous to birds before
expiring, which is bad news for any of our
feathered friends which decide to snack on a
slug.
Organic slug pellets have recently become
available which do not suffer from this toxin
problem, but the jury is still out on how
effective they are, and they are still a
chemical treatment which many people would
choose to avoid in these environmentally
conscious times.
The most eco-friendly way of fighting back
against slugs is to provide an environment
which is hostile to them, while being
attractive to their natural predators such as
birds, hedgehogs, and toads. Attract these
animals to your garden and they will do a fine
job of gorging themselves on the local snail
population, and so reducing the severity of
measures you need to take yourself. Also, slugs
and snails like to spend the day in cool, damp,
dark conditions such as those found in messy
flowerbeds and uncut grass. Remove these
refuges by keeping your garden as tidy as you
can, and there's less chance of a slug evading
a predator.
However much you try and discourage your local
molluscs from living in your garden, the lure
of tasty young seedlings is certain to be
stronger. You can protect individual plants by
placing some sort of barrier around them.
Popular substances include sharp grit or broken
egg shells, which slugs and snails are
reluctant to slide over, or a smear of vaseline
around the top of a plant pot which works in
much the same way. You can also buy copper
rings or bands, or even tape, which work by
giving a small electric shock to any snail
which tries to cross it - a most effective
deterrent!
Slug traps are available which you half bury in
the ground, and fill with a tempting liquid
such as beer. The idea is that as the slugs
crawl towards it, they fall in and drown (or
die of alcoholic poisoning, possibly). The
drawback is that these traps are a waste of
good beer, and cleaning them out every morning
is not a pleasant task if the catch has been
good!
For severe slug problems, you could always
resort to bacteriological warfare. A kind of
slug parasite called nematodes is available,
which you add to water and spray onto the
infected areas. These parasites will kill any
slug they can find, continuously and for a
period of up to 6 weeks, but it's an expensive
option and doesn't do anything against
snails.
A much cheaper option, although it may gain you
something of a reputation in the neighborhood,
is a midnight slug hunt. After dark, when the
slugs are at their most destructively active,
patrol your garden armed with a torch, a
bucket, and a means of slug dispatch. This
technique is especially effective during rain,
although probably not an exercise you'd care to
repeat too often!
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