7 Ways to Deal With Slugs

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 966

  • @bethelangeliquelimuaco7013
    @bethelangeliquelimuaco7013 Před 3 lety +22

    I have been searching for hours about slug control and you are the only one who comprehensively explained everything. Thank you. Slugs are killing my sunflowers :(

  • @pauleaton6908
    @pauleaton6908 Před 5 lety +107

    Great video, I do the night hunting thing but can't bring myself to chop them with scissors, so lob them into my neighbours chicken and duck pens instead which causes a riot as the birds do a far more gruesome job than the scissors fighting over the meat!!

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +17

      Feeding them to the ducks or hens is a great way to 'upcycle' the slugs!

    • @snipper1ie
      @snipper1ie Před 3 lety +1

      Let the ducks in

  • @SovannNou
    @SovannNou Před 3 lety +5

    You made a very clear useful informative documentary about how to prevent vegetation from slugs. Your work changes the way I treats my small garden in Cambodia. Thanks you

  • @susanhills8015
    @susanhills8015 Před 4 lety +26

    Hedgehogs have got brilliant memories. They even remember through hibernation! I feed them sunflower hearts and mealworms in the same place every night. I have about 6 hedgehogs now and last year they bought their babies to the feed bowls too.....

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +1

      Interesting about their memories.

    • @eyeonit469
      @eyeonit469 Před 3 lety

      Good for you......drives me crazy that people put out slugs bait which kills the hedgehogs which are the very animal that controls the slugs and snails.

  • @chimay3
    @chimay3 Před rokem +6

    #6 "Give them a home".
    This method should always be included as it works as a gauge to assess the magnitude of the current slug problem and an indication of species involved.
    Good work done with this video BTW 😎

  • @bobhub600
    @bobhub600 Před 2 lety +7

    As some others have said before, as an alternative to using beer you could do a very basic fermentation of water, sugar and yeast or maybe even substitute the sugar with some garden waste that is high in glucose so the yeast can eat. As opposed to spot traps you could get a large PVC pipe, cut it in half and run it down the middle of your crops (perpendicular to what appear to be your bedding rows) and fill it with the sugar yeast solution and flush it out once a month or so

  • @shazzam532
    @shazzam532 Před 4 lety +11

    I watched this video last year when I first took on an allotment. I didnt think I could see myself killing slugs, I just relocated them. One year on and the damage this year is so frustrating. I hunt them down daily and have a bucket of water to throw them in and put the lid on. I empty that into my compost pile weekly.

    • @NoMore-gc3gi
      @NoMore-gc3gi Před 4 lety

      It is better to dump them in the toilet.

    • @maxsno
      @maxsno Před rokem

      So sorry slugs suck

    • @beewasere
      @beewasere Před 3 měsíci +1

      It’s three years on, are you sitting up all night at the lotty with a machine gun yet? 😂

  • @peterbattiste9213
    @peterbattiste9213 Před 5 lety +56

    I used a frog one year that got trapped in the garden when I placed fencing around it and it worked pretty good with the slugs the frog got big at the end of the season

  • @dieantwoordrare281
    @dieantwoordrare281 Před 5 lety +38

    P.S you forgot number 8. Lobbing them in the neighbours garden when no ones looking.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +3

      I used to do that, but I like all of my neighbours!

    • @DjGlenJon
      @DjGlenJon Před 5 lety +1

      straight into the next dors garden.....there cats shite in my yard all the time

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      @@DjGlenJon Fair trade, I suppose ;)

    • @Nexus-ub4hs
      @Nexus-ub4hs Před 5 lety +1

      Haha do you do that too? Only my least favorite neighbor 😂 her dog used to jump over her 1ft wall to crap in the backyard (she had been trying to make her yard look like it was bigger by having no boundary and assuming my land), so fair’s fair lol.
      She had to put a fence up when I produced an eyesore, that’s after she butchered two of my hedges that were decades old and beautifully trimmed.

  • @izzyo6852
    @izzyo6852 Před 5 lety +60

    Yeast dissolved in warm water works as well as beer, for a fraction of cash.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +7

      Good idea, I'll have to try it.

    • @VanderlyndenJengold
      @VanderlyndenJengold Před 4 lety +3

      @@REDGardens I use beer from a supermarket which is 99 pence (UK) for 4 large cans. Horrid bitter but very effective against slugs. I tried the yeast but it didn't work for me.

    • @adronlamb9334
      @adronlamb9334 Před 4 lety +3

      RED Gardens the alcohol in the beer keeps the yeast from going old and moldy. I have tried using yeast only and after a week it starts to get real nasty. Black mold

    • @izzyo6852
      @izzyo6852 Před 4 lety +1

      @@adronlamb9334 After only 3 or 4 days, the yoghurt size pots are full of slugs and need emptying and refilling with fresh slug candy. Never seen mold. Not enough time. Best of luck.

    • @viviennegoede7991
      @viviennegoede7991 Před 4 lety

      Fresh or dried yeast?

  • @dabigchina
    @dabigchina Před 5 lety +216

    Needing a lot of beer is a problem I have myself - and I don't even have a slug problem.

    • @thegeneralist7527
      @thegeneralist7527 Před 5 lety +2

      Lol! Craft beer?

    • @MrJust2times
      @MrJust2times Před 5 lety +3

      The struggle is real

    • @DanielOlivierArgyle
      @DanielOlivierArgyle Před 5 lety +15

      Don't pay for beer. They just like the yeast from it. Buy bulk cheap instant bread yeast and mix with sugar. Use that in combination with coffee grounds for the win

    • @garsm2290
      @garsm2290 Před 4 lety +2

      So since you drink more, you don't find slugs inside your shirt or trousers?

    • @kcl060
      @kcl060 Před 4 lety

      Hilarious!

  • @Marlene5018
    @Marlene5018 Před 3 lety +7

    An opossum mom and her three kids moved to my garden but before I noticed that I was surprised not seeing anymore slugs and snails recently … now I know why 😆!

  • @PermaPen
    @PermaPen Před 5 lety +5

    I have now set up permanent homes for slugs, similar to your no.6, and have found it to be very effective: all my beds are sloped such that I can run thick planks of wood all along the back. As soon as there is something the slugs like growing in the bed, they congregate behind the nearest board, often dozens at a time. It's simple to pull the board out and snip their heads off. There are other advantages too: centipedes and beetles take up residence there, sometimes even frogs. Plus new slug arrivals eat the corpses instead of the plants, until my next sweep. I make sure I check the planks after a heavy rain, that's when they all move in.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +2

      It is a great method, and I have also noticed a diversity of other creatures taking up residence under the boards. It is also interesting how slugs will eat off the corpses of the dead ones, I figure they are eating the remains of the stomach contents.

  • @DanielOlivierArgyle
    @DanielOlivierArgyle Před 5 lety +7

    Thanks for making this video. I have some responses you might find useful:
    - Be careful with ducks, because they're curious and will peck everything just to try it. If they peck a legume stem, they've destroyed the whole plant.
    - Don't use beer-buy bread yeast in bulk and mix with sugar, then add to warm water to activate. It's the yeast and sugar they like-try it and see. I promise!
    - If you choose to use slug traps, put them at a set number of paces apart so you can easily track them under foliage
    - Use coffee grounds on the soil surface around expensive plants like Kale-slugs absolutely hate coffee.
    - And lastly, some of your potato damage might be wireworm. I found that maris piper was particularly bad for it (and slugs) I really recommend Charlotte for your second earlies (if only for yourself, because they're delicious), because wireworm don't seem so interested. If you ever have trouble with wireworm, give me a shout.
    Thanks for the vid and keep going!!

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks for the suggestions/feedback. I had heard that about slugs, and would be hesitant to let them into the gardens, but with some crops it would be fine. I'll have to try the yeast trick, and I agree completely about the need to be careful with the locations of beet traps, as I have lost them before int he foliage, and they are nice to discover later on! I don't think it was wireworm. I have seen a bit of that kind of damage, but not much of it.

    • @boocat8768
      @boocat8768 Před 4 lety

      HI Daniel , I've never grown any veg before and I'm going to try this year . I only have a small yard and it will all be grown in bags for growing . I want to do post and carrots etc . Do you have any recommendations please . Thankyou .

  • @WolfeTone17-98
    @WolfeTone17-98 Před 3 lety +1

    I have killed over 1900 slugs this summer at night with a torch and my fishing knife and they keep coming. Cutting the surrounding grass down low helps and I have in the past used 2 wires close together with a battery around raised beds and greenhouses and that has been the best repellent I have tried so far.

  • @mikeharrington5593
    @mikeharrington5593 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks, good stuff. Another possible addition to the armoury is a natural semi sheltered shallow pond which will attract frogs, an effective slug predator. Frogs also like the sheltered damp places frequented by slugs. You can chuck the slugs into the pond too - food for some small basic goldfish if you have them too. Hedgehogs can travel several km each night & they tend to have a regular route, or run, so although you don't see them every day/night they could still be helping out..

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I need to build a few ponds up in the garden area. Hopefully then the frogs will come.

  • @wipeoutxl21
    @wipeoutxl21 Před 5 lety +5

    lay wood chips everywhere you can around your gardens. It makes a great home for ground beetles which eat slug eggs but not crops. The very dry wood chips on top and uneven terrain makes it tougher for slugs to move. The woodchips settle and compact and the slugs dont actually live in the woodchips.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I have started to use wood chips in some of my growing spaces, and it will be interesting to see if they make a difference.

  • @dancingcedar
    @dancingcedar Před 4 lety +10

    A primo slug trap is a half a cantaloupe that one has eaten the contents of. :)

  • @jackiesargent5271
    @jackiesargent5271 Před 3 lety +1

    We found a good way to use slug pellets without causing a hazard to wildlife .used old butter containers with slots cut in the side and an elastic band to keep the lid on .Slug pellets are a bait so the slugs crawl in through the slots eat the pellets and die inside the tubs .It worked really well.

  • @thinlizzy535
    @thinlizzy535 Před 4 lety +2

    You are very merciful. I will drop ever single slug I find into salt water or my fire pit. I find a sprinkle of salt over my lettuce works marvellously, and it doesn’t hurt the plants as they can handle such small amounts of salt very well.

  • @albaoutdoors7462
    @albaoutdoors7462 Před 5 lety +4

    This is my first year growing veg and really my first year taking the garden very serious so I’ve had a lot to learn and pretty much a war with slugs lol as I refused to use poison pellets. I have a small garden so a lot of container growing one method I have found to be effective was putting a ring of salt round and under the containers this method needs reapplied after rain etc but I found it to really block the slugs granted I combined it with beer traps and night hunts.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I imagine the salt ring would work, but as you mention, several strategies are often needed. Hope you have lots of success with your growing.

  • @fatintaha5825
    @fatintaha5825 Před 4 lety +14

    Just sprinkle table salt around the edge of your garden or around the wet covered areas. Salt is an instant slug kilker and is harmless to the garden when sprinkled away from plants.

    • @gardenholicplanter8300
      @gardenholicplanter8300 Před 4 lety

      We have the same methods use yes salt is very easy and effective. Try watch it czcams.com/video/ja2iIsD0oUA/video.html

  • @alzal6483
    @alzal6483 Před 3 lety +2

    Have you ever used a spray bottle set on stream with a diluted household ammonia and water mixture? Very efficient at night, in the rain, on flipped over boards and cheap. The ammonia breaks down as nitrogen and nearly all of my plants are unaffected with an overspray. It’s great not having to sever the slugs or stoop to their level to easily kill them. You don’t even need to be a good aim. I’m keen to learn if you’ve ever used diluted ammonia this way?

    • @oliverb5726
      @oliverb5726 Před 3 lety +1

      I was just about to comment the same thing! I mix it up in a 5l sprayer and then seek out the slugs at night. Also give the entire growing area a light covering too. One application had a significant impact on slug numbers.

  • @michaelmcclafferty3346
    @michaelmcclafferty3346 Před 5 lety +1

    I have two allotments in north- east Scotland but don't have a big slug problem.
    I don't like killing things so I feed any slugs I see to my hens.
    I have also read that using scattered used coffee grounds act as a deterrent. I realise that this is not feasible on a bug scale such as the Red Gardens.
    This video is , as always, very helpful and informative. Thanks Bruce.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I used to have a source of coffee grounds, but wasn't convinced about the effectiveness of its a slug barrier.

  • @LorettaLaz
    @LorettaLaz Před 4 lety +12

    *EVERY* gardener I've talked to in my farming area all use the same thing, Diatomaceous earth.
    They said it slices them open as they crawl across it on the dirt and they just decompose.
    It's totally natural and completely safe as it's just crushed shells, the shards are too small to hurt us, animals ... it just hurts creepy crawlies in the garden and has the added benefit of being good for your garden.

    • @Gapeaches77able
      @Gapeaches77able Před 4 lety +3

      ALBERTA GIRL Diatomaceous Earth Food Grade. The other is pool grade and is highly toxic.

    • @Sine-gl9ly
      @Sine-gl9ly Před 4 měsíci

      DE is useless when it gets wet, though.

  • @blanckieification
    @blanckieification Před 4 lety +11

    When you have a small garden, I recommend using mashed eggshell or mashed seashell. Just sprinkle it on the ground. They cut themselves on sharp edges and they do not like it. Btw, it is a very easy and cheap metod.
    Also, some flowers repel insects and slugs. Mostly fragrant flowers. I have some lavenders and it works quite wel. You can easily multiply them.

    • @Steampunksaly
      @Steampunksaly Před 3 lety +5

      This is an old wives tale - they can move over broken glass and are not affected in any way

    • @blanckieification
      @blanckieification Před 3 lety

      @@Steampunksaly would surprise me, especially when you say over broken glass

    • @FireflyOnTheMoon
      @FireflyOnTheMoon Před 2 lety +2

      @@blanckieification They will happily move over glass, gravel, sand, egg shells, coffee, even electric fencing.

    • @SedrikGSX
      @SedrikGSX Před rokem

      @@blanckieification I have seen them moving above a razor blade so happy, even fine steel brushes that are really sharp, just the lime protects them from cutting. I just spent like 3 hours reading and watching videos and I think the best solutions are traps with yeast and sugar or two copper bands connected to a 9V battery, they get a shock which prevents them trespassing the 2nd band. Maybe if you manage to keep it dry, a mix of salt and coffee around the plants helps too

  • @aatt3209
    @aatt3209 Před 4 lety +1

    OK, I am going to try the beer, the scissors, and the wooden board, yes, these slugs are getting to me now. I am not hesitant to get rid of them anymore. Thanks so much for your 7 tips.

  • @karoshi2
    @karoshi2 Před 5 lety +4

    I'm trying to establish a stable population of tiger slugs. They eat other slugs' eggs and also hunt other slugs actively.
    It's said they would not eat living plants at all which I cannot sign; they love small radishes for example (only the top of the root that sticks out of the ground) and mushrooms, also they damage other plants a little bit but do not cause any problems that way. Definitely way less than the Spanish slugs.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      I have been keeping my eye out for the type of predator slug, but don't seem to eb around here.

  • @racbirsingh7005
    @racbirsingh7005 Před 4 lety +61

    You missed the Big One. BUILD A POND This will attract Frogs and toads that will eat 100-plus slugs per evening

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +18

      I have heard that was an effective approach, but only talked about things I have tried and worked.

    • @asbjrnhansen8477
      @asbjrnhansen8477 Před 3 lety

      @@REDGardens biochar on the suface! slugs dislike a little, maybe becouse sharp. with a good fire place solution(close oxigin from embers) you can make large quantities of heat and biochar, put on surface of no-dig.

    • @captnodge
      @captnodge Před 3 lety +1

      My plan toady is i put in a largish plastic recycling bin in the ground for that same reason .just need to find a solar bubbler and goldfish. I'm hopping to find some local fogs or toads as they are illegal to buy and just release them into the environment (makes sense)
      I

    • @FireflyOnTheMoon
      @FireflyOnTheMoon Před 3 lety

      It hasn't worked at all of me.

    • @carlduffin
      @carlduffin Před 3 lety

      @@REDGardens - I can vouch for a pond to keep slug populations down. Just make sure there is an escape slope on one side so hedgehogs do not drown in it.

  • @leonardopab5
    @leonardopab5 Před 5 lety +15

    How can someone dislike this video?

  • @alancarlyon3928
    @alancarlyon3928 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I am not sharing my beer with slugs! I put my veg cuttings is a large container which is embedded into the ground, greased around the top of the container so they can't get back out, then dispose of them in the morning -Brown bin/garden trash.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 11 měsíci

      Sounds like a useful approach.

  • @DrWoodyII
    @DrWoodyII Před 5 lety +2

    Funny you mentioned the beer method. Beer can also be used to eliminate roaches and mice. A study at Cornell University shows that mice show a distinct preference for imports, especially Michelob, as opposed to domestics. Your video is well done and informative, thank you for sharing.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      I hadn't heard that about mice and rats.

    • @e13cess
      @e13cess Před 5 lety +2

      Aww man ..I'm Mexican the only import for me is coronas!!!
      Wonder what would happen if you leave a shot of tequila for the to drink .. lmao

  • @tanyapineda7212
    @tanyapineda7212 Před 4 lety +3

    Very interesting. We recently found a creative solution for a single slug from our garden... not really helpful if you have more than 1 to deal with...but nonetheless my daughter who has a pet frog & the slug is its new terrarium mate & they seem quite happy together. 💚

    • @MeneTekelUpharsin
      @MeneTekelUpharsin Před 2 lety +1

      Everyone who has a garden can only dream of only having a single slug to deal with.

  • @debrariley2057
    @debrariley2057 Před 4 lety +6

    Really enjoyed this video. Thank you

  • @nickduggan3084
    @nickduggan3084 Před 4 lety +2

    Patrick over at one yard revolution (in Illinois) credits his decrease in slug population to wood chips which have made a nice home and increased the population of ground beetles which pray on slugs

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +1

      That is interesting.

    • @DD-xt6vo
      @DD-xt6vo Před 3 lety

      How would I get rid of the beetles then?

  • @Gianemakeup
    @Gianemakeup Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks for the multiple ideas. Will try few of them in my garden. Loved hearing your interesting accent.

  • @thekatt...
    @thekatt... Před 3 lety +5

    I make toad houses , lots of toad houses .Also, collect toads and put them where needed. They feed at night too.
    ❤🇨🇦☕☕

  • @treforjones8369
    @treforjones8369 Před 5 lety +29

    Have you considered introducing lots of frogs into your garden? I do this and it is very effective.

    • @chrisoliver6690
      @chrisoliver6690 Před 5 lety +9

      Easy to install a small pond.

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 5 lety +7

      Ducks is also what I've seen as being very popular. Also far nicer on your psyche than murdering them, and they provide eggs and meat should you so choose to eat those!

    • @chrisoliver6690
      @chrisoliver6690 Před 5 lety +18

      @@VACatholic Wait, if murdering slugs effects you psyche, then surely murdering ducks would be far more damaging?

    • @christawijkhuijs1929
      @christawijkhuijs1929 Před 5 lety

      @@chrisoliver6690 😂

    • @VACatholic
      @VACatholic Před 5 lety +6

      @@chrisoliver6690 Honestly that's probably my neurosis talking. I just find slugs ugly and disgusting and being around them and murdering them just gross. Whereas duck I know how I treated it and it's being done for more of a purpose than just murder.
      I realize that's a rationalization and not normal, but here we are.
      I take the criticism, and can't really explain why I feel that way. Funny joke though!

  • @zelena_oliva
    @zelena_oliva Před rokem +2

    A few extra tiles are also very effective as traps. The larger ones the better.
    Thank you for the video!!

  • @fxm5715
    @fxm5715 Před 5 lety +1

    I've been thinking about making a small, shaded pond from a concrete mixing tub to encourage frogs and toads to hang out in my vegetable garden. A solar bubbler and some goldfish should keep it healthy. The slugs and various caterpillars that our hopping friends eat are probably the most damaging pests I have, (other than the groundhog who always gets the lowest hanging tomatoes.) Plus, seeing frogs and toads always makes me happy!

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I have also been thinking of how I can make a few permanent wetland type areas around the gardens. Yeah, seeing frogs around is great!

    • @bambinaforever1402
      @bambinaforever1402 Před rokem

      I have a pond and a few frogs live there - the population of slugs and snails in my garden did not become less. Love frogs as well

  • @iainm.uttridge9331
    @iainm.uttridge9331 Před 5 lety +3

    I have a small no-till hobby garden here in Iceland and have occasionally had slug problems. Not like yours, as the winters here are long enough to keep them down a bit (5 and half month growing season). I am also fortunate that I have a good population of predatory ground beetles which has been a real blessing (maybe your idea of laying down boards, killing the slugs, and leaving their remains in place might work to attract those beetles into your garden over time ???).
    Last winter I decided to try a thicker cover of old hay on top of a layer of compost. The hay layer was about 20 to 30 cm thick when I put it down and settled to about 10 to 15cm by planting time. This helps my worm population survive better as they are able to stay closer to the surface and closer to the compost layer that they feed on due to the hay insulating the soil against the cold. I have done thinner layers in the past and noticed then that the slugs' eggs would generally be between the soil and the hay. Last year with the thicker layer of hay, I found fewer eggs between the soil layer and the hay, and found fewer eggs overall, and most of those in the hay. With both the thinner and thicker layer method, when the snow finally melts I remove the hay and compost it. This allows sunlight to warm the soil again, though at this point it is still too cold to plant as there will generally be a few frosts after the initial thaw. Also, when the soil is newly exposed the birds come in and remove virtually all of the slug eggs remaining. Any eggs I do find, I simply spread out on top of the soil to attract the birds.
    ...note*...; Although birds can be a nuisance when the seedlings go in the ground as they tend to uproot a few with their scratching through the soil, I find that the garden still produces such an abundance that I can tolerate some plant loss.
    As to slugs in compost; Just hypothesising , but I believe the slugs only really survive close to the surface of the compost. The ones that get buried deeper simply die and become compost. When one scrapes off the surface layer of the finished compost and uses it to start the next batch, the overwhelming majority of the slugs end up in the new heap, only to be buried under the raw material added throughout the summer, or eaten by birds as they scratch through the new compost.
    Anyway, this seems to work in the Icelandic climate with a no-till garden. I don't know if anything I spoke of here is usable or adaptable to another climate, but I thought I'd mention it just in case.
    Thank you for your videos. I will continue to watch them and learn as I follow your progress.

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah, my first idea was that slugs buried in the compost just die. Maybe they also get sick. IDK, slugs love cool and humid places but they eat fresh vegetables, I don’t see how they can survive on rotting plants.
      Thanks for sharing your hay technique. I’ll see if I can adapt it to my garden.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      That use of hay to protect the soil life and then to collect it and remove the slugs in the process, sounds like a great idea. I think it might work here in Ireland, so long as I removed it in time for the soil to warm up, and the birds to peck at what remains. Your thoughts about the slugs only existing in the top layer of the compost pile makes sense.

  • @luzmontoya2090
    @luzmontoya2090 Před 4 lety +4

    Very informative, thank you!

  • @johncritch6812
    @johncritch6812 Před 3 lety

    I had a small cabbage patch I. Built a solid wood wall around it a foot high. I then attached 2 or 3 strips of smooth edge which is used for putting down carpet. It has dozens of tiny tacks on it at an angle slugs will not climb over it out it on before slug season keep grasses mowed near wall works great !

    • @johncritch6812
      @johncritch6812 Před 3 lety

      Smooth edge goes against wall to hold carpet down.

  • @BotondKisKovacs
    @BotondKisKovacs Před 4 lety +2

    I can vouch for the beer method. 2 years ago I have killed about 2000 giant slugs (some up to 15cm) with cheap beer in 2 nights. I used 2.5L plastic bottles cut in half lengthwise with a scissor. It kind of spreads when you pour beer in it but they don't seem to need much depth to drown. By morning all of them were filled with dead slugs. I filled a small bucket in 2 days.
    My chickens got a nice treat of beer soaked slugs.
    Now I am planning to get a couple of Indian runner ducks. They say those are the most effective against them and they are also very good egg layers.

  • @milanfrusone9700
    @milanfrusone9700 Před 4 lety +3

    you are so cute!!! I love your different approaches, and NOT giving up!!! thanks for the great info :)

  • @warpdrive101
    @warpdrive101 Před 4 lety +3

    Tip six is the best I’ve done slug cleanups a few times in last twenty years tip six is best and fastest here in UK, with tip six it only takes a few minutes every day or other day

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +1

      I agree. It is the best and only takes a few minutes a day - but only if I remember to do it.

  • @MrEerwin
    @MrEerwin Před 4 lety +1

    Great info, well presented with a smart, wide-awake perspective.

  • @derekrobson6121
    @derekrobson6121 Před 4 lety

    Hi , I am a sufferer of Slugs wrecking my Veg Plots.Then I tried Nematodes (Parasitic worms that eat and breed inside slugs) It was devastating. and I realised that the effect of these in warmer weather began to spread and a bigger population helped a similar problem in my wife's flower garden which is adjacent. I realise that you've tried nematodes in the past . I was told that warmer weather helps them breed successfully. Best wishes . Deke

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety

      thanks, that is interesting. Perhaps the soil just needed to be warmer.

  • @SteveRichards
    @SteveRichards Před 5 lety +12

    I use all the same methods as you, except the beer traps as I don't have space for them in my beds. I do however do a few things you don't:
    I never distribute complete heads of cauliflower, lettuce or calabrese, instead I always break them up and wash them first. My family prefers this as they get a big mix of different veggies for each meal, rather than being overwhelmed by one. Occasionally by special request I will do a single container of one type of veg for specific receipes. I also pre-wash all of my salads.
    I use nematodes on the leafy green beds, in April, July and September. I find they are only useful when I'm treating a relatively empty bed, so that I can get the nematodes deep into the soil. Since I rarely have all of my beds clear at the same time I split a nematode box and save some of them in the fridge.
    I also use slug pellets under a short piece of inverted gutter, this keeps them dry, I only use these in beds that have nets, so the birds/hedgehogs can't get to the dead slugs. I only use this technique in beds that have a lot of slugs, typically when I've cleared spinach or lettuce. I also throw a few slug pellets in the gap between my polytunnel wall and the raised beds I have in mine.
    Using these and your list of six techniques I have very few losses and in the thousands of salads I've eaten I've only - knowingly - had one slug in my mouth, but I noticed it straight away and it was soon in 'heaven'.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      Thanks for sharing your experiences, and interesting to hear about how you use nematodes and slug pellets.

  • @oysterman2517
    @oysterman2517 Před 5 lety +21

    Good advice, thanks. Do you know that you can use yeast and sugar instead of beer? Cheers

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +2

      Thanks. I had heard about the yeast option, but haven't tried it.

    • @johnherberte8131
      @johnherberte8131 Před 4 lety +1

      What type of yeast would you use?

  • @DeadeyeJoe37
    @DeadeyeJoe37 Před 5 lety +1

    Living in Hawaii, I'm glad that this isn't my garden. With rat lungworm disease being a possibility, we have to be very vigilant in thoroughly washing every veggie that a slug may have come in contact with. I still struggle with slugs, which is why I'm watching this video. :)

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      Wow, I hadn't heard of that.

    • @MeneTekelUpharsin
      @MeneTekelUpharsin Před 2 lety

      What kind of disease is that?

    • @DeadeyeJoe37
      @DeadeyeJoe37 Před 2 lety

      @@MeneTekelUpharsin it's basically a type of lungworm. It's a parasite. Luckily, humans aren't a good host, so they don't do good. However, they can make their way around the blood stream and if they get in your brain, they cause issues from migraines to turning you into a vegetable

  • @backritepaint
    @backritepaint Před 5 lety +1

    you are good at making captivating videos.

  • @Jake-dx1mf
    @Jake-dx1mf Před 4 lety +11

    I go out with a bright flashlight 15 minutes per night early in the season, and catch enough to keep the population down all year

    • @theuglykwan
      @theuglykwan Před 3 lety

      I've been doing that, on the 3rd night I didn't find many. Gave it a rest for a few nights and they were back again in full force. It's a constant battle for me as well so I think 15 mins every other night is about what I can maintain.

  • @LaoSoftware
    @LaoSoftware Před 4 lety +10

    I collect all the slugs and snails to release them in the forest. There's no need to kill them cuz these bugs do benefit the environment.

    • @onamissionpassionista5978
      @onamissionpassionista5978 Před 4 lety +7

      @ LaoSoftware - Slugs and snails do not benefit anything, they wreak havoc please - saying they benefit the environment is pure sentimentalism.

    • @duarte8669
      @duarte8669 Před 4 lety +1

      Onamission Passionista they are food to many animals

  • @user-TrustJesus
    @user-TrustJesus Před rokem

    I found a solution to control my HUGE problem with slugs.
    First I tried using scissors, then salt! But I found the best solution!
    I mix 1 part vinegar to 3 parts water in a spray bottle and it kills them immediately.
    Took several nights out with a flashlight - but it worked really well. After 3-4 nights there was WAY less slugs 🐌
    I just bought more vinegar - and gonna go out couple more times.
    First couple nights I was killing 4-500 a night! Now I only see about 20%.
    It never hurt the grass, I try keep it off the plants/ vegetables.
    This video shows some good methods - I woulda tried some traps looking back. I might still do that going forward.
    Good luck 🍀 with your garden.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před rokem +1

      Interesting, I'll have to try that.

  • @dlou3264
    @dlou3264 Před 3 lety

    I’ve never heard better advice for slugs. Thanks! 👍 👍

  • @dieantwoordrare281
    @dieantwoordrare281 Před 5 lety +3

    Great video I think the list videos do really well on youtube and this ones great. You have however put me off potatoes for life! :)) ;P

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      The list videos seem to do really well, though I generally avoid them as there seems to be too many out there. Lol, sorry about the potato thing!

  • @MindfulScott
    @MindfulScott Před 5 lety +3

    The most effective method I found against slugs is store bought iron phosphate (called Slug-B-Gone) where I live. I'm curious what is RED Gardens opinion is on this method?

    • @tirvplumbing
      @tirvplumbing Před 5 lety +1

      I use these too rather than the metaldhyde pellets and find them effective.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      I have used these types of pellets before, but didn't really evaluate the impact enough to be able to say how well they worked. I guess I just don't like buying them in, as I have a few other more active methods for dealing whiten them. Also, as the gardens are very open and publicly accessible, I had a few comments from people that they were surprised that I was using poison! Hard to tell that they are not the more poisonous pellets when they are on the soil. I shoud experiment with them some more to see how well they work.

  • @malsoonsakit4786
    @malsoonsakit4786 Před 3 lety

    One of the best presented videos regardless to the interesting topic

  • @johnmykoliw6246
    @johnmykoliw6246 Před 4 lety

    good video and lots of ways to get rid of slugs i was clearing over 100 a day now i use beer and there are a lot less to clear now

  • @Sun45673
    @Sun45673 Před 3 lety +4

    Every morning at 4 am to 5 am Slogs roaming around
    I just put SALT into top their back and in second dead

  • @joe4324
    @joe4324 Před 5 lety +13

    Frogs, toads. I hardly see them in my gardens.

    • @ginamango5
      @ginamango5 Před 4 lety

      I never see them in my garden. Wish I have some to get rid slugs & pests in my garden

    • @emmettroche313
      @emmettroche313 Před 3 lety

      @@ginamango5 frogs like to live in dark enclosed bushy areas so if you’re garden is in all day sunlight they are unlikely to hang around

  • @brianwhite9555
    @brianwhite9555 Před 5 lety

    My fenced in veg garden is only about 800 sq. ft., making it fairly easy to patrol for slugs & snails. I often throw them over the fence and into grassy areas that I mow, but I've used the scissors on them too, which brings a certain satisfaction. :) I like the idea of laying boards down to attract them to one spot. I guess one could saute' them in butter & garlic and pretend they're escargot.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      I just find it easier to slice them where they are, than to collect them to throw them somewhere else, and I agree that there is a certain amount of satisfaction about it. It is a small issue, but I also don't like the idea of exporting the fertility from my gardens that made up the slug bodies, so killing them where I find them means the fertility stays where I want it.

  • @Tehstool
    @Tehstool Před 4 lety +1

    Your videos are always so interesting.

  • @ymirishere7108
    @ymirishere7108 Před 5 lety +11

    Was that a new composting setup? If so, will we get a video on it?

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      It is an new setup, that I am still experimenting with, but plan to make a video later int he season.

    • @ymirishere7108
      @ymirishere7108 Před 5 lety

      @@REDGardensthanks again for the response.

  • @dudeguy8351
    @dudeguy8351 Před 5 lety +4

    I'd rather drink the beer myself too, thanks.

  • @mellisarose5601
    @mellisarose5601 Před 4 lety

    These are all great! I will try some. I have a large garden but not close to the size of yours. I have been sprinkling salt around my plants and they have helped some. Actually they helped a lot

  • @aaronpower24
    @aaronpower24 Před 4 lety +1

    You should try using white lime powder around what you are growing to stop them crossing around it has helped with our small garden this year

  • @clintonyoung6205
    @clintonyoung6205 Před 4 lety +8

    I take slug hunting to the next level and pack a bug-assualt gun that shoots salt it's made for shooting flys it's awesome lol

  • @justinfiorini3142
    @justinfiorini3142 Před 5 lety +6

    Ever though of doing voice over work?

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      No, I haven't. It doesn't come easy to me.

    • @gillianchallenger6219
      @gillianchallenger6219 Před 4 lety

      RED Gardens I too ,love your voice , it’s clear calming to the point and great information . Thank you

  • @jeffdustin
    @jeffdustin Před 5 lety +1

    light weight ducks. My Indian Runners used to vacuum up slugs like kids with candy. They were light weight enough not to trample too much. The only problem is predation but a good electric fence is affordable and very effective at repelling coyotes (does Ireland have coyotes or some kind of wild dog, fox maybe?).

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      My problem is that withy main gardens I can't fence them in, as it needs to be open access to lots of people.

    • @jeffdustin
      @jeffdustin Před 5 lety

      @@REDGardens I hear you. The ducks will run off and the predators will wipe them out fast.

    • @jeffdustin
      @jeffdustin Před 5 lety

      @@REDGardens to be honest all of my guests learned when the electric fence was live...very quickly. A healthy respect for sparks ensued.

  • @nickstraw1952
    @nickstraw1952 Před 5 lety

    Timely! The current wet here, after the heat wave will no doubt bring out the slugs again. Over the few tears I have been hhere, I have gone through the same stages pretty much.
    Thanks for the reminders and the great video.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      Thanks. I am just looking out at a lot of rain here, so much double down on the slug patrol again.

    • @nickstraw1952
      @nickstraw1952 Před 5 lety

      The catch crop of pointed cabbage which was hiding under the purple sprouting and Brussels sprouts was infested with slugs when I harvested some yesterday. But being philosophical, at least they left the other brassicas alone.
      I can get replacement plug plants at 10p each from our local commercial plant grower. For the quantities of brassicas we need, it makes far more sense.
      Waiting for you to do a video on moles. If you don't have any, I can send you some.
      Another victim of the heat, the Florence fennel bolted. Last year, the cut off roots re-sprouted and we ended up having at least three harvests. Not sure if the bolting will affect that.

  • @catsrockthehouse1
    @catsrockthehouse1 Před 4 lety +6

    He has a lot of space, he should just get ducks! They'll eat all the slugs :)

    • @ronnieroo227
      @ronnieroo227 Před 3 lety

      Or hedgehogs, they are endangered species now so need a safe area and don't eat your plants.

    • @Steampunksaly
      @Steampunksaly Před 3 lety

      But the ducks and hedgehogs will do more damage to the crops than any slugs would do

  • @asabovesobelow1362
    @asabovesobelow1362 Před 5 lety +4

    A pond for frogs maybe?

    • @athaclanor
      @athaclanor Před 5 lety +3

      I very much agree, frogs are great to have in the garden, they eat an incredible amount of slugs, and it feels good to be providing habitat for them.

    • @asabovesobelow1362
      @asabovesobelow1362 Před 5 lety +1

      @@athaclanor I tried last year but of course we had the drought so it didn't work out. :/

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      I need to find a way to have permanent bodies of water around, it is quite dry up on that hill.

  • @lornabartlett2744
    @lornabartlett2744 Před 4 lety +2

    Amazing video that's great encouragement thanks a bunch!👨‍🌾👩‍🌾

  • @void-citizen
    @void-citizen Před 5 lety

    I shit u not 30 minutes ago I was thinking "huh I havent seen anything from red gardens in a while...". Good shit dude.

  • @Reodhadh
    @Reodhadh Před 5 lety +4

    You need ducks, chickens would damage crops to much.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      Chickens can definitely damage a lot of crops, but I have been advised that ducks can do a fair amount of damage too. Do you find that ducks leave most crops alone?

    • @Reodhadh
      @Reodhadh Před 5 lety +2

      @@REDGardens Ducks do leave most crops alone but don't really care where they trample though, most people use a double fence system to keep them off weaker bodied crops and fruit bushes because of this.
      Something to keep in mind though is their manure is a quite powerful NPK fertilizer and is soft almost liquid, so after a rainfall it can throw your levels for a spin if you aren't careful and can outright kill crops if left in one space for extended periods of the year, but obviously there are ways to take advantage of this by rotating which beds they are occupying; Great pest control and fertility boosters.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      @@Reodhadh Good to know about their manure. Thanks.

  • @stannistrump4622
    @stannistrump4622 Před 5 lety +3

    Let a flock of ducks roam in the garden.

  • @bbsaid218
    @bbsaid218 Před 4 lety +1

    You have a great looking garden..will definitely try some of these tips...I use thick layer of grated orange/lemon/lime peel for individual plants..seems to work.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +2

      That sounds like an interesting option.

  • @SteveY1180
    @SteveY1180 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for the tip and you have a very nice looking garden

  • @linhfphung7867
    @linhfphung7867 Před 5 lety +3

    Have you considered a bird house? XDD

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      We have loads of birds around already.

  • @dorothysay8327
    @dorothysay8327 Před 4 lety +8

    Diatomaceous earth. Boom.

    • @ileto042
      @ileto042 Před 4 lety

      100%

    • @sislertx
      @sislertx Před 4 lety

      Washes away too.fast here...slugo extra if u have to...i got snails and rolly polly out the kazoo...each day i collect.2 gallons worth im PUSHING 80 and i.can only bend down so much...other wise i could get 4.gallons a day..

  • @tanyapineda7212
    @tanyapineda7212 Před 4 lety +1

    Your farm looks incredible btw💚.

  • @anthonytindle5758
    @anthonytindle5758 Před 3 lety

    Great video I used to go out night hunting with a torch and catapult so the slugs when caught I used to catapult them gardens away from mine but they if they are the same ones found there way back and this went on for some time until my garden was circled around the borders with slug pellets which helped imensly then one year digging my garden found a few slugs in the soil so then I stopped the gardening just kept it clean and tidy and a sprinkling of pellets. You could say the slugs won, but there are millions of them out there in eggs form just waiting to pounce on gardens.

  • @susanhills8015
    @susanhills8015 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm sure I read one time about someone using black beetles. They made a "moat" round an area and put black beetles in. The beetles couldnt climb out and ate the slugs that tried to cross.

  • @jimgreenwood5360
    @jimgreenwood5360 Před 4 lety

    The guy that sells vegie seedlings at the local calls me the "polenta man". After I told him about placing polenta in a jar on its side he tells. He used it his green house and the floor was covered with snail shells that crunched under foot. He wondered what the new sound was and now calls it the sound of success. Give it try, the jar keeps it dry, it attracts slugs and snails which eat it and it kills them.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety

      Sound like an interesting thing to try.

  • @rubygray7749
    @rubygray7749 Před 5 lety +1

    I would have thought that putting slugs in the compost pile would mean they laid zillions of eggs in it, thereby spreading the population hugely every time you add compost to your beds.
    I have found that susing the board method is excellent, but I draw the line at snipping every slug with scissors. I sprinkle them en masse with a watering can of that wonderful golden elixir that we all produce 2 litres of each day - the older and more pungent the better - and to watch them instantly turn white and die horribly is very satisfying, plus knowing the soil is now fertilised as well is a bonus!

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      The slugs just don't seem to reproduce. I find very few eddy in the compost, and none in the aged stuff. Hadn't heard about that use straight urine before.

  • @Krispy1011
    @Krispy1011 Před 3 měsíci

    you want to get rid of snails and slugs - get a pie pan and fill it with beer and put it in your flower bed or garden in the evening - the next morning - if there are slugs in your flower bed or garden, the pie tin that was filled with beer will be filled with slugs and snails - I tried it and it works every time. You will be amazed at how many slugs and snails are in your flower beds and gardens, especially if they never have been treated for them.

  • @ashmash1934
    @ashmash1934 Před 4 lety

    Tip for you. Gather a lot of slugs and chuck them in a bucket of water, add one packet of nemaslug and leave for a week, you have now bred a load of nematodes without spending a fortune on 20 packets of nemaslug as you'd need for 1/4 acre or so. Use this to water the area and save a bit to make more with more captured slugs and clean water. Simples, one pack of nemaslug can do your whole garden :)

  • @eyesaidthat2109
    @eyesaidthat2109 Před 3 měsíci

    I washed a house for a lady one time. Her outside water faucet was in a basin in the ground. It was full of slugs as she was feeding them and insisted that she hook up the water hose because I would disturb the slugs.

  • @oceanle
    @oceanle Před 4 lety

    Wow, I find this video so satisfying !

  • @jorgemach___2162
    @jorgemach___2162 Před 5 lety +2

    here in Ontario the toads in the garden do a go job not perfect but it helps. hey try this and let me know what you think.
    Ammonia 2 spoons in one liter of water and a spray bottle. what little over spray on plants dose not hurt them .remember don't use scented ammonia

    • @thegeneralist7527
      @thegeneralist7527 Před 5 lety

      I have a tip to share, or what you may find an interesting anecdote. European wall lizards (Ref. www.timescolonist.com/news/local/jack-knox-leaping-lizards-victoria-under-invasion-1.20241222). In Victoria, BC for years I had to deal with slug damage. Then one day a lizard appears, cute, unusual. Next year more. Now I walk outside and I almost always see a lizard scurry away. Now I very seldom ever see a slug, you almost have to go hunting for them. Slug problem gone. I used to have carpenter ants too. Gone, except for one I see now and then. Other insect species appear to be unaffected, however I have noticed mosquitoes are not so bad this year, so I suspect they may be eating the larvae. I'm not advocating introducing a species without thorough research, but I have yet to observe any detrimental effect. I just checked and it says they eat flying insects like flies and crickets, so they could be eating mature mosquitoes as well. And now I think about it I don't often see flies anymore. Never used to see crickets, but I have noticed bees and wasps appear unaffected.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I hadn't heard of using ammonia.

    • @jorgemach___2162
      @jorgemach___2162 Před 5 lety

      @@REDGardens it depends on how strong the concentration is that they sell where you are....you may need to add more

  • @StayPrimal
    @StayPrimal Před 2 lety

    Very useful thank you. I have been lucky this year but I am preparing for next seasons :)

  • @captnodge
    @captnodge Před 3 lety

    Yeah bloody things .urrrg I'd be put of eating mushrooms cooked for life if I accidentally cooked one and discovered it on my plate a slug that is .
    Thanks for your ideas nice and straightforward. Looks a lovely market garden you've got there .
    I've subscribed so look forward to more subjects .good luck

  • @TheOriginalMarimoChan
    @TheOriginalMarimoChan Před 4 lety

    I get a pair of disposable wooden chopsticks, spray the tips with Pam non-stick cooking spray and throw the slugs in a small sandwich bag, also coated with non-stick cooking spray so the buggers cannot climb back to the top of the bag. After I hunt them at night, I zip up the bag and throw into the trash. The non-stick cooking spray prevents the slug slime from gumming up the chopsticks.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety

      Interesting approach. I hadn’t thought about using something that they can’t climb.

  • @fealma1398
    @fealma1398 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for your tip...having problems with slugs and mole and squirrels on my garden now

  • @ronaldbequeath2307
    @ronaldbequeath2307 Před 5 lety +1

    I definately agree slugs and snails are responsible for more damage then many of the pests who we blame. The way I and another gardener handle slugs is to use ducks, he uses pekins, which i find do more damage, and I muscovies. The soldier holding down the fort are my muscovy ducks that attach the slugs with a vengenious, leaving me with healthy plants, happy ducks and minimal slug damage. Although you may not be able to have ducks in your area. This is a lot less work for me.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety

      Do you need to enclose the ducks to keep them from wandering, and to protect them from predators?

    • @ronaldbequeath2307
      @ronaldbequeath2307 Před 5 lety

      I live on a 7.75 acre triangle on a deadend road having a 10 acre marsh lake at the end. The muscovies a group of 21 four month old ducklings and mom tend to stay around the home buildings or the tall weeds across the road, As they do get older I fear and grow wing feathers they then will fly to the marsh and come home for supper or become someone elses. They go through the gardens on the way to tall weeds and as they make their way around the acreage. Having two aussie dogs my ranged hens stay away from the gardens or get a rolling which the dogs enjoy I'm afraid more then they should. One other thing I do is utilize diatomaceous earth which seems to keep slugs at bay along with other insects. Because of the high fertility of the muscovies and large hatches the loss of ducklings is not that great and i am hoping to go into thd winter with 12 to 15 hens. The aussies guard the property at night catching opossum, raccoon, and driving away fox, coyote, mink and weasal. Until i am able to trap them.

  • @bigonorganics5753
    @bigonorganics5753 Před 2 lety

    have you tried copper tape around the perimeter of the garden. you can unravel a round copper scrubbing sponge like unrolling a sock and then you can cut it in a spiral and get super tiny barbed wire copper to line your beds with.

  • @letizianunes1169
    @letizianunes1169 Před 4 lety

    Where I live in Italy people prevent slugs with a metalic mosquito net around the garden at least 1 meter from the plants and then time to time just put salt around that net... Work very well.

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 4 lety +1

      That is an interesting approach.

    • @letizianunes1169
      @letizianunes1169 Před 4 lety +1

      @@REDGardens It is and is work just be carefull with the water and after rain if the salt is gone just put some more again. Another trick is to dig around the garden 10 or 15 cm dip like a small river cemet it all a little bit and put the water with vinegar inside no slugs can cross that.

  • @colinhogg4293
    @colinhogg4293 Před 5 lety

    i use the extra sourdough starter mixed with warm water , sugar and a bit more flour, put it in baby food jars spread all around the garden,a small jar half filled can attract alot of snails and slugs

    • @REDGardens
      @REDGardens  Před 5 lety +1

      I will have to give that a try.