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View Full Version : Controlling Slugs and Snails in Your Garden


Riz
18th March 2008, 02:01 AM
http://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/slug7.JPG (http://www.thegardenhelper.com/pixpg/slugpix.html)
The slug... your adversary

Slugs may be a very serious problem to you if you live in the Northwest or other moisture laden areas of the country. A single lawn prawn can successfully remove an entire row of seedlings from your garden in no time at all. He can turn a perfect plant into swiss cheese over night and return to the safety of his hideaway, leaving you to wonder what happened...... As slugs wander about, doing their evil little slug deeds, they leave behind them a trail of slime which amounts to nothing less than a road sign for themselves and every other slug to follow to the grand feast. To make the situation even worse, slugs are hermaphrodites, they all have male and female reproductive systems. Yes, they can mate with themselves, and in the privacy of their own abode, each slug will produce two to three dozen eggs several times a year. The egg clusters look like little piles of whitish jelly BB sized balls. They will hatch in anywhere from 10 days to three weeks or longer, and these sluglingss can mature to adulthood in as little as six weeks. Destroy the eggs... wherever you find them.
Slugs may live for several years, getting larger with proportionately larger appetites each year. Now, do you really want to go out to your garden some morning and find an eighteen inch Banana Slug waiting for you? The battles and the war

Although you may never win the war against snails and slugs entirely, you owe it to your plants to fight them with every weapon at your disposal. You can control slug populations with several different methods. With each battle which you win, you have prevented hundreds of new slugs from hatching. The battlefield

As with any battle plan, it is to your advantage to be able to set the field. Set your field by cleaning your garden, and eliminating the places where the slugs hide, sleep, and reproduce.
Pulling the weeds from your garden is something you need to do anyway. As you pull each weed, you remove a potential slug outpost.
Keep all decaying matter cleaned out of your garden beds. While leaves make a good mulch, once they begin to compost (http://www.thegardenhelper.com/compost.html) they become food and shelter for slugs and snails.
Prune the branches of any shrubs which are laying on the ground. Keep the old leaves and such cleaned out. By doing this you will have destroyed yet another slug haven!
Cultivate your soil regularly to keep the dirt clods broken up, and unearth any slugs which may have burrowed under the surface.
The shaded areas beneath decks can be a slug arena: keep them weed and litter free.
Just about anything can become a slug home. Boards, rocks, pots and other gizmos should be kept out of the garden.
Keep the lawn edges trimmed. Slugs will congregate under the umbrella of unkept grass. The weapons

For the sake of the environment, it is better to make an effort to control slugs and snails without using chemicals and poisons before you resort to chemical warfare. Hand to hand combat
Keep slug pokers stuck around the garden at random. Meet your enemy, one on one... Your weapon is at hand, impale them!
Fill a small bowl with stale beer. Put it in the areas where the slugs are active. Stale beer attracts the slugs and they drown. You may also use grape juice or a tea made from yeast, honey and water.
An early morning stroll around the garden, salt shaker in hand will often result in many casualties for the bad guys.
Destroy any and ALL slug eggs you find!
Bait and destroy tactics work. Set a pile of slightly dampened dry dog food in an area frequented by slugs. In the morning and evening visit the feeding station a few times.... slug poker in hand! Battle lines
Cedar bark or gravel chips spread around your plant will irritate and dehydrate slugs.
The sharp edges of crushed eggshells around the plants will cut and kill slugs. The calcium in the eggshells is a good soil amendment anyway!
Sprinkle a line of lime around your plants. (Obviously this won't work around plants requiring a more acidic soil)
Certain herbs (Rosemary, lemon balm,wormwood, mints, tansy, oak leaves, needles from conifers and seaweed will repel slugs. However using a mulch of these plants will only turn thhe slugs away, in search of other food sources.
Oat bran will kill slugs when they eat it... sprinkle some around.
Enlist allies..... snakes, ducks, geese, toads, and Rhode Island Reds would enjoy helping you out as they dine on your slugs. Chemical warfare

Probably the most popular, most effective, and easiest method of controlling slugs is by using commercial slug bait products. These may be purchased in the form of meal, pellets, powder, or liquid. The primary concern of using chemical baits and poisons is the possibility of poisoning small critters, creatures and even small children. Always follow the instructions to the letter, and go the extra steps necessary to insure that the poisons are inaccessible to anything but slugs and snails.
Make traps to collect slugs out of plastic pop bottles. Cut the bottle in half and then invert the top part of the bottle into the bottom part to create a no escape entryway. The slug bait can be placed inside the bottle and will draw the slugs in where they will die and await disposal. http://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/bottletrap1.JPGhttp://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/bottletrap3.JPG
Cut a one inch 'V' notch in the rim of a cool whip bowl. Invert the bowl in the garden over the slug bait, and place a rock on top of it to keep it secure.
Commercial, disposable slug traps may be purchased at many garden centers. Quite a bit more expensive, but they work!
At the very least, cover the bait with a weighted piece of wood or an old shingle to prevent access to the poison. The slugs will still find it, consume it, and die. Surprise tactics

Try as you might, the war against slugs will go on as long as there are gardens. You will never win, but you can keep them under control. Remember that for every slug you destroy, you are preventing countless generations of that slug's offspring


http://www.thegardenhelper.com/slugs.html

Riz
13th May 2008, 02:59 PM
just saw a wopping huge snail dead in one of my chili containers, well done me for using snail and slug killer :)

~Obsidian~
3rd August 2008, 02:59 PM
Argh! Lovely rainy weather today leading me to finally SEE the culprits that have been attacking my bean plants....TINY SNAILS :mad:

Would a line of cat litter around the plants keep them away?

Riz
3rd August 2008, 03:06 PM
Argh! Lovely rainy weather today leading me to finally SEE the culprits that have been attacking my bean plants....TINY SNAILS :mad:

Would a line of cat litter around the plants keep them away?

No..

I had lots today in the pots all dead, as i scattered some pellets down in the pots last night.. Get some slug and snail repellent otherwise before you know it, it will be party time for the slugs and snails.. They love wet humid evenings so watch out for the weather..

if you are using mozilla firefox as your browser you can get a plug in which gives you a 7 day weather forecast in your own area... here is a link were i mentioned it earlier... http://www.muslimgrower.com/discussionforum/showthread.php?t=39

~Obsidian~
3rd August 2008, 03:14 PM
Cheers, added it

Although, if I want to transplant them to flat bags of compost will that be feasible? They're 10 litre bags, if I can how many can I get into them?

~Obsidian~
12th August 2008, 04:09 PM
Huge manky slug (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arion_ater) from the garden center

Riz
12th August 2008, 08:01 PM
looks horrible doesnt it..


:natur011:

farah
18th November 2008, 01:43 AM
aww leave the lickle fella's alone there must be some good that comes of their existence in your gardens surely?

But might be an idea to get rid of them if you have young children:

http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/health/HealthRepublish_969551.htm

Riz
18th November 2008, 04:52 PM
gosh..
the man from sydney is a complete idiot for eating the slugs as a dare..

~Obsidian~
18th November 2008, 07:33 PM
gosh..
the man from sydney is a complete idiot for eating the slugs as a dare..

I second, third and fourth that!!

farah
19th November 2008, 03:22 AM
true but maybe he thought it would be fine seeing as its normal to eat them in say France but over there they drop them in salt for a couple of days (alive) then cook them - apparently UK slugs are nice & fat because of the weather - that's from an old French teacher not personal experience

dhakiyya
19th February 2009, 03:13 PM
ewww at eating slugs!!!!

my mum goes into the garden each evening armed with rubber gloves and an ice cream tub, and physcially removes every slug she finds, then crosses the road (very busy potentially slug squishing road) where there is a large common, and releases them there.

I have yet to see any slugs in Saudi Arabia though!!!! I'm sure its far to dry and hot for them.

The ants on the other hand....... :eek: one inch long some of em!!!!!

Riz
19th February 2009, 04:21 PM
^ slugs are really slimy, once i picked one up with my the thumb and index finger, washed my hands thoroughly but i could still feel the slime on my thumb for a while...

1 inch long ants, are they called "fire ants" by any chance.. maybe they are the same species of ants which plague Texas every summer and really bite people...

dhakiyya
19th February 2009, 05:40 PM
I don't know what they're called... there are smaller ants here (about 0.75cm long) that have a really horrible bite, the pain goes up and down the limb they've bitten and it hurts for ages :( and they bite you repeatedly :eek: never been close enough to the 1 inch long ones to let them bite me!!!!! not planning to either!!!!!

Indefinable
23rd February 2009, 11:53 AM
Huge manky slug (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arion_ater) from the garden center

Disgusting.

globalart4u
10th March 2009, 02:45 PM
as it is frozen the ground outside best thing is to turn the ground over once that will expose their eggs and kill a large majority of them as they hate the cold. i do that twice every winter and the slugs and snails are less.

Sajid
11th March 2009, 05:56 PM
Dam Slug they began to craw into my living room

For a few days i notice slug trails i had no clue where they came from i took away all the furniture and could not find those buggers

so one night i decided to litter the capret with blue slug pellets

and found the creep one morning

then 2 weeks later i found more slug trails again found the creep dead the night after i put slug pellets!!!

edibles
11th March 2009, 06:28 PM
it has been ages since i have seen a slug
as for ants i got a horrid shock when i opened a big tin of sugar in pk, big and small ants everywhere

Sharky
13th March 2009, 05:05 PM
Me and my family all got together to dig a ditch around our vegetable patch once, then we filled it with pellets and snail bait.

You would not believe the number of dead slugs we found attempting to breach the defences! trail after trail

But come to think of it i am actually trying to find a more "humane" way of killing snails because the traditional tactics of using salt seem kind of cruel - because the creature seems to have a chemical reaction and swell and then explode on itself if you use salt... i want to have salt as a last resort :cool:

Foz
21st March 2009, 09:43 PM
oh yuck....slugs....im getting them in my kitchen.... funny thing is they only started when i got my new kitchen fitted?! :eek: i think the fitter messed something up..... im getting huge brown ones..... and i mean huge.... came down at 2.30am the other morning and got the fright of my life....2 of them!! one was crawling out from under my cooker and the other was just sitting there....managed to get one out...and put it in the garden (no doubt it will be back) and the other was half jammed under the cooker)

i have no idea whats going on!! i thought i had got rid of them.....then went on a major cleaning blitz......but they still came back

got some pellets which going to put in the garden..reluctant to put them under my cupboards as will potentially end up with slug bodies there.

dhakiyya
23rd March 2009, 09:49 PM
There must be a hole somewhere where they are getting in, if your back door is in the kitchen there may be a gap between the door and the floor. That's a common way for slugs to get in. Otherwise maybe the people who fitted your kitchen made a small hole or left a small gap (e.g. where the pipes go in the wall or something) - find how they are getting in and plug up the hole with something. Follow the trails they leave that might give you a clue as to where they are getting in.

We have this problem with ants (huge scary Saudi ones! see above!) My husband got this filler stuff that he used to plug up the holes where they are getting in. And we had things fitted on the bottom of the doors, to stop the sand getting in when we have sandstorms, they also keep out the ants :) a small number have managed to get in since then but MUCH less than there used to be!!!

One flat we lived in in Britain we'd get slugs in the kitchen. Can't remember exactly how they were getting in!! But its not nice finding slug trails in your house, or actual slugs :eek:!!!!!

Foz
23rd March 2009, 11:29 PM
There must be a hole somewhere where they are getting in, if your back door is in the kitchen there may be a gap between the door and the floor. That's a common way for slugs to get in. Otherwise maybe the people who fitted your kitchen made a small hole or left a small gap (e.g. where the pipes go in the wall or something) - find how they are getting in and plug up the hole with something. Follow the trails they leave that might give you a clue as to where they are getting in.



The problem is they coming out from UNDER my kitchen cupboards... got a gap between the skirting board and the floor (the fitter was useless) so its difficult to follow the trail and work it out.... im getting so stressed out i said to hubby im going to pull out the blasted cupboards!
i have a bad feeling they coming from a waste pipe which is behind the kitchen sink cupboard....... ive not noticed any holes in between the back door and floor

:eek:

edibles
15th April 2009, 09:51 AM
i found some it has been so long and now they are back, opened fire, casualties on both sides, sprinkled some mint leaves around most vulnerable of plants i.e carrots. also found a worm, good sign about my soil

Riz
15th April 2009, 05:48 PM
i found some it has been so long and now they are back, opened fire, casualties on both sides, sprinkled some mint leaves around most vulnerable of plants i.e carrots. also found a worm, good sign about my soil


buy some slug and snail pellets, so you can sleep easy at night.. :)

edibles
15th April 2009, 06:19 PM
are they organic, i generally go organic when possible. is broke some new bamboo shoots and old bamboo leaves, cut them down and sprinkled them around to, slugs hate them, dont know why

Riz
15th April 2009, 06:21 PM
you can get organic pellets..

in my experience the organic pellets do work, but the chemical blue pellets kills them quicker.....

felicity
15th April 2010, 09:42 AM
http://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/slug7.JPG (http://www.thegardenhelper.com/pixpg/slugpix.html)
The slug... your adversary

Slugs may be a very serious problem to you if you live in the Northwest or other moisture laden areas of the country. A single lawn prawn can successfully remove an entire row of seedlings from your garden in no time at all. He can turn a perfect plant into swiss cheese over night and return to the safety of his hideaway, leaving you to wonder what happened...... As slugs wander about, doing their evil little slug deeds, they leave behind them a trail of slime which amounts to nothing less than a road sign for themselves and every other slug to follow to the grand feast. To make the situation even worse, slugs are hermaphrodites, they all have male and female reproductive systems. Yes, they can mate with themselves, and in the privacy of their own abode, each slug will produce two to three dozen eggs several times a year. The egg clusters look like little piles of whitish jelly BB sized balls. They will hatch in anywhere from 10 days to three weeks or longer, and these sluglingss can mature to adulthood in as little as six weeks. Destroy the eggs... wherever you find them.
Slugs may live for several years, getting larger with proportionately larger appetites each year. Now, do you really want to go out to your garden some morning and find an eighteen inch Banana Slug waiting for you? The battles and the war

Although you may never win the war against snails and slugs entirely, you owe it to your plants to fight them with every weapon at your disposal. You can control slug populations with several different methods. With each battle which you win, you have prevented hundreds of new slugs from hatching. The battlefield

As with any battle plan, it is to your advantage to be able to set the field. Set your field by cleaning your garden, and eliminating the places where the slugs hide, sleep, and reproduce.
Pulling the weeds from your garden is something you need to do anyway. As you pull each weed, you remove a potential slug outpost.
Keep all decaying matter cleaned out of your garden beds. While leaves make a good mulch, once they begin to compost (http://www.thegardenhelper.com/compost.html) they become food and shelter for slugs and snails.
Prune the branches of any shrubs which are laying on the ground. Keep the old leaves and such cleaned out. By doing this you will have destroyed yet another slug haven!
Cultivate your soil regularly to keep the dirt clods broken up, and unearth any slugs which may have burrowed under the surface.
The shaded areas beneath decks can be a slug arena: keep them weed and litter free.
Just about anything can become a slug home. Boards, rocks, pots and other gizmos should be kept out of the garden.
Keep the lawn edges trimmed. Slugs will congregate under the umbrella of unkept grass. The weapons

For the sake of the environment, it is better to make an effort to control slugs and snails without using chemicals and poisons before you resort to chemical warfare. Hand to hand combat
Keep slug pokers stuck around the garden at random. Meet your enemy, one on one... Your weapon is at hand, impale them!
Fill a small bowl with stale beer. Put it in the areas where the slugs are active. Stale beer attracts the slugs and they drown. You may also use grape juice or a tea made from yeast, honey and water.
An early morning stroll around the garden, salt shaker in hand will often result in many casualties for the bad guys.
Destroy any and ALL slug eggs you find!
Bait and destroy tactics work. Set a pile of slightly dampened dry dog food in an area frequented by slugs. In the morning and evening visit the feeding station a few times.... slug poker in hand! Battle lines
Cedar bark or gravel chips spread around your plant will irritate and dehydrate slugs.
The sharp edges of crushed eggshells around the plants will cut and kill slugs. The calcium in the eggshells is a good soil amendment anyway!
Sprinkle a line of lime around your plants. (Obviously this won't work around plants requiring a more acidic soil)
Certain herbs (Rosemary, lemon balm,wormwood, mints, tansy, oak leaves, needles from conifers and seaweed will repel slugs. However using a mulch of these plants will only turn thhe slugs away, in search of other food sources.
Oat bran will kill slugs when they eat it... sprinkle some around.
Enlist allies..... snakes, ducks, geese, toads, and Rhode Island Reds would enjoy helping you out as they dine on your slugs. Chemical warfare

Probably the most popular, most effective, and easiest method of controlling slugs is by using commercial slug bait products. These may be purchased in the form of meal, pellets, powder, or liquid. The primary concern of using chemical baits and poisons is the possibility of poisoning small critters, creatures and even small children. Always follow the instructions to the letter, and go the extra steps necessary to insure that the poisons are inaccessible to anything but slugs and snails.
Make traps to collect slugs out of plastic pop bottles. Cut the bottle in half and then invert the top part of the bottle into the bottom part to create a no escape entryway. The slug bait can be placed inside the bottle and will draw the slugs in where they will die and await disposal. http://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/bottletrap1.JPGhttp://www.thegardenhelper.com/graphics/bottletrap3.JPG
Cut a one inch 'V' notch in the rim of a cool whip bowl. Invert the bowl in the garden over the slug bait, and place a rock on top of it to keep it secure.
Commercial, disposable slug traps may be purchased at many garden centers. Quite a bit more expensive, but they work!
At the very least, cover the bait with a weighted piece of wood or an old shingle to prevent access to the poison. The slugs will still find it, consume it, and die. Surprise tactics

Try as you might, the war against slugs will go on as long as there are gardens. You will never win, but you can keep them under control. Remember that for every slug you destroy, you are preventing countless generations of that slug's offspring


http://www.thegardenhelper.com/slugs.html


Sounds nasty this slug poker! Not for me I can't bear to even look at slugs and snails.

Foreveryoung
20th October 2011, 06:56 AM
Indeed a very informative thread. I got a visitor today in my garden .... Till now I thought its just the cats ruining my newly germinated herbs and veggies but just today I came to know that slugs need to be addressed too.


This one might be out for a morning walk on my clay pot -_-

Foreveryoung
20th October 2011, 07:05 AM
lol I heard ducks are among nature's finest slug eaters......I shud just turn the few loose in the garden to add more to it's beauty as well as natural way to get rid of slugs and snails.

stylemichelle21
20th October 2011, 04:01 PM
lol I heard ducks are among nature's finest slug eaters......I shud just turn the few loose in the garden to add more to it's beauty as well as natural way to get rid of slugs and snails.

Not a bad idea...certain ducks wreak havoc on snails and slugs. Many other animals who are natural snail and slug hunters are difficult to find.

Riz
24th October 2011, 05:38 PM
if u scatter eggshells around the base of the plants that kinda deters them as well as they dont like to slither over sharp jagged edges.. and its natural :)