Lizdrewery's Inbox

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dirtyfingers
Dirtyfingers

20 May, 2008

 

Your more than welcome. Glad I could help. One thing about the beer treatment, if it doesn't work you can always drown your sorrows. lol Good luck.

Dirtyfingers

On question - Slugs and Snails

dirtyfingers
Dirtyfingers

18 May, 2008

 

Although I've never tried it personally, (haven't had a slug problem---knock on wood) I've always heard you could put out saucers of beer. Apparently the slugs like beer and crawl into the saucers and drown. You might try it before you start ripping up plants or using some type of poison.

On question - Slugs and Snails

hedgehogg
Hedgehogg

15 May, 2008

 

There is a nematode advertised in thompson and morgan that eats your slugs in the soil. I have considered buying this. Does anyone have opinions on these namatodes or even tried them.

On question - Slugs and Snails

jasmine
Jasmine

14 May, 2008

 

Hi Liz, My fuschias seem to remain uneaten but something has scoffed most of my lilies as they come up!!

On question - Slugs and Snails

Sid
Sid

13 May, 2008

 

Ooooo - there are LOADS of plants that are not eaten by slugs - a quick list from my garden.....

IN sun:-
Cistus (loads of varieties in all shades of pink and white)
Rosemary
Lavander
Geraniums (hardy)
Euphorbias
Heucheras
Lamiums (for ground cover)
Oriental poppies (and all other species for that matter)
Phormiums (for the foliage)
Osteospurmums
Roses
Nigella / Love in a Mist (and annual that self-seeds itself)
Eryngiums
Grasses

Part Shade:-
Rhodos and azaleas
Camellias
Euphorbias
Geraniums
Dicentra

Shade:-
Ferns and ivy

I've left out 'borderline' ones, but many more would probably be Ok. If you plant MOST of your garden with plants that are not too susceptable to slugs, then the population should stabilise at a lower level than it is at current and you can then introduce the more susceptable plants - hostas, delphiniums, achilleas etc. I will be writing a blog about this soonish. Hope this helps.

On question - Slugs and Snails

Greenfingers
Greenfingers

13 May, 2008

 

Good point Liz, no good poisoning other creatures. Plus, with our 3 cats, I avoid pellets usually, but I was desperate.

On question - Slugs and Snails

Greenfingers
Greenfingers

13 May, 2008

 

Dreaded slugs and snails! I hate them! We also seem to suffer with badly eaten plants. My clematis Dorothy Walton has been chewed to death, the foxgloves have been nibbled, the Nemesias have been nibbled, the runner beans have been nibbled. All I can think of is that slugs and snails have a better diet than we do! Things I have which haven't been eaten (yet) are Pieris, Cordeline, Geraniums, Conifers, Crocosmia, strawberries, bamboo, acer, grape vine, azalea, smoke bush and ivy. I resorted to slug pellets a couple of weeks ago as plants can be expensive and I didn't want to splash out on a new plant only to have it eaten. I have noticed an improvement but the little blighters wait til you're not watching, then creep up and munch away. Keep a close eye out for them. I check around in the morning before going to work and again in the evening after watering. I reposition the slugs and snails in a hedge (for bird food). Encourage birds to your garden and they'll clean a few up too. I don't like using pellets as we also have 3 cats who enjoy the garden as much as we do and I'm not sure they're the best solution to be honest, it's just that I was desperate! Hope I've helped a little?

On question - Slugs and Snails

bren
Bren

13 May, 2008

 

Hi,
they don,t seem to touch my aqualegas or my geraniums,and if your not in the full sun, what about ferns

On question - Slugs and Snails

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