Kitchen Garden

SLUGGING IT OUT

Gardeners appear to spend more time and effort on slug control than almost any other pest, except perhaps vine weevil. Not all are as evil as they’re cabbage-painted. Are you trying to rid your garden of the wrong type of slug? Most gardeners imagine every slug is out to demolish their seedlings, let alone every snail, but there is a sizeable number of species which are blameless in their diet, feeding on dead vegetation alone. They’re valuable assets in the compost heap, helping decomposition: even surplus slime encourages a build-up of humus.

SLUG PELLETS, FOR OR AGAINST?

For those who don’t want to use traditional metaldehyde slug pellets, there is a range of organic options. Metaldehyde traces have been found in drinking water. While the blue colouring and added bitter

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Kitchen Garden

Kitchen Garden2 min read
Book Reviews
by Huw Richards and Sam Cooper In this new book two popular online authors combine to show you how a family of two to three can become self-sufficient in food from a relatively small space (equivalent to half a standard allotment plot). While Huw dea
Kitchen Garden5 min read
Flavoursome Fruit Currants
Spring is peak season in the garden. Soil to prepare, seeds to be sown, young plants to be tended on kitchen windowsills and in greenhouses up and down the land. Weather forecasts need to be scrutinised daily for any hint of a late frost. Oh, and the
Kitchen Garden4 min read
Our Plotter Of The Month
Do you have an allotment or veg patch at home and when did you start growing veg? I've had an allotment plot for almost four years now. I started witha half plot, which I thought would be too big for me. Within six months I'd run out of space and app

Related