They are everywhere: there is hardly a garden that is free of slugs this summer. The slimy molluscs have become a real nuisance. If you go to the trouble of collecting the uninvited guests from your plants, you will inevitably ask yourself the question: What is the best way to dispose of the collected slugs?
Collecting slugs with a trick
Before thinking about what to do with the pests, you first need to collect them. You will have the greatest success for a rich “slug harvest” after a Rain shower or early in the morning. If you are disgusted by touching the slimy snails, it is best to pick them up with a glove or a small scoop.
You can also use a wooden board in your garden and wait for the snails to gather underneath. As they like it damp and cool, they will be there in large numbers. A lettuce trap is also a great snail magnet: Simply place lettuce leaves in a sheltered spot and wait until the next day. You can then easily collect the slugs.
This is how you should dispose of the collected slugs
Opinions differ widely on how to deal with collected slugs. You often hear about killing them with scissors, beer, salt or boiling water. But even though slugs are among the animals for which little or no sympathy is shown, it is now known that even these so-called lower creatures are sensitive to pain.
Incidentally, killing slugs can also be counterproductive. Slugs are cannibalsso that they are attracted by the smell of dead conspecifics. If the slimy animals decompose in the bushes, more of them will come.
So how can you dispose of the snails you collect? The best way is to take them as far away from your garden as possible. Throwing them in the neighbor’s garden is not the best choice here. You should also avoid taking your collected snails to other natural areas. Instead, take them to Dog meadowswhere the crawling molluscs can scavenge the dog’s droppings. This kills two birds with one stone: the slugs have disappeared from your garden and they keep the dog meadows tidy by removing the dog excrement.
How to keep slugs out of your garden in the long term
Now, getting rid of slugs is only a short-term solution. Even if you have removed 50 slugs from your garden today, there could be just as many slimy visitors tomorrow. To avoid having to head to the nearest dog run with a bucket full of slugs every day, you should make your garden as slug-free as possible. unattractive for slugs.
Effective protection against the pests is provided by planting snail resistant plants. These include bearded carnation, marigold, foxglove, tomatoes, rosemary and potatoes. If you grow vegetables, choose a raised bed – this offers a certain amount of protection from snails. A slug fence can also keep the pesky visitors away from your vegetable plants.
Establishing predators can also put a stop to the annoying snail plague. If you make your garden attractive to hedgehogs, shrews, blackbirds, starlings, magpies, toads and slow worms, the snail problem will soon take care of itself.
By the way: There are snails that are protected in Germany. These include the spotted snail and the common snail. If you kill one of these protected snails, you could face a fine of up to 65,000 euros!
Source: utopia.de, bussgeldkatalog.org