Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Slug Patrol, part 3
Boy, these slug critters are relentless. My kale seedlings are being eaten away. I just came in after checking again with my trusty flashlight, trowel, and blue bucket of death fluid. Tonight I filled the bucket half way with water, some salt, and white vinegar. At least seven slugs were dispatched to slug hell. A couple were only slightly bigger that a pin head. They seemed to know exactly where to go. Do they have some kind of seedling radar or what? I am going to keep up this process until they are under control, if not completely exterminated from my garden. I am even thinking of more deathly potions - maybe adding ammonia to my blue bucket. This is war!
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Slug Patrol, part 2, and copper strip deterrents
Went out again last night between 10 and 11 p.m. to check for slugs. None were visible via flashlight and I hightailed it back into the house because it was somewhat chilly out there. I am determined to keep up the patrol but I still may wind up getting some Sluggo even though it is awfully expensive.
One thing I will never purchase are copper strips. Copper strips apparently give slugs a shock when they try to cross. I won't go into the chemistry and physics as to how this works ( I am sure I do not understand it myself), but it does work. A copper barrier does not kill them, it only stops the little buggers from moving in the direction of your tender plants for a slug steak dinner. The Weekend Gardener Monthly Web Magazine says that one problem in dealing with these guys using copper is that you need to have a wide enough strip to stop some slugs from arching over it to escape getting that cattle prod feeling. I do not believe we have the kind of slugs capable of doing that except banana slugs and are they really that intelligent to perform yoga or Kama Sutra positions to evade a copper taser jolt? I doubt it! Also, copper is awfully expensive. I checked the web and a 1 inch by 10 ft. strip was going for $22.95! And, according to the Weekend Gardener, copper strips need to be cleaned with vinegar periodically to keep them effective - tarnish build-up negates the jolting power. I will save my polishing efforts for the copper items I have in my house, thank you. Finally, hasn't anyone noticed that there are copper thieves everywhere out there? Copper has become very popular on the black market in this economy. Who needs to have their copper strips ripped off shortly after they install them? I don't.
So for me, I am continuing my nighttime slug patrols.
Last Frost Dates and Vegetable Planting Guides for Sonoma County
I promised on my show this morning that I would post information about planting veggies and a way to find out your last frost date in our Russian River Communities. Here they are:
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Sun, partly cloudy, & my first butterfly of 2011
There is a lot of light in my house right now because of the partial sunshine here at 11:40 am PST and I am hopeful that I will be able to get out into my garden on a regular basis. There is still some rain around the corner and I have to admit that I was happy to read that La Nina is dying in the South Western Pacific. This means our rainy season is slowly but surely coming to an end. And we desperately need to dry out. My soil is still very moist and there is a lot of work to be done out there.
While taking a moment to look out one of my windows, I noticed a white butterfly flying around my garden. It was the only one! I gasped when I saw it and I smiled. It is a wonderful harbinger of Spring, but I had to feel a little bit sorry for the little guy or girl, as the case may be. There is nothing in my garden for it to feed on for nectar right now, and the evenings are still very cool. I am sure it was enjoying the window of sunlight opening onto my garden. Spring is almost here!!! I am feeling more and more alive!
Friday, March 11, 2011
On Slug Patrol and "The Kings Speech"
Well, I am beginning to see a lot of slug damage on the kale and collard seedlings I have put into my garden that should be able to produce veggies for me as we move slowly out of this very cold winter and the day's light is increasing. They are going into sunny locations but they are being eaten alive. After going to see "The King's Speech" at the Rio Theater this evening, I returned home and between 9 and 10 p.m., I went out to search for slugs. And boy did I find them! I used a large flashlight and I checked the seedlings one by one and the surrounding soil. I estimate that I harvested somewhere between 15 and 20 slugs. Some were real babies and some were about an inch long. I threw quite a few into a blackberry patch in a field next to my property, but then I decided to destroy the next batch I found by killing them. I got a blue bucket, put in some very hot water and a bit of salt. This group was drowned, cooked, and salted. I will empty the bucket into the road in the morning.
I have been using oat bran and ashes from my wood burning stove but these appear to be only slowing them down and a few of the slugs I found seemed to be really rolling in the oat bran like they had come upon a feast and were thanking the garden idiot who had added to their diet. The ashes are a bust too. No slugs appeared to be stuck or dying on that. Also, aromatic herbs do not appear to be working, I scattered small pieces of rosemary around the seedlings and I even went so far as to stick some rosemary cuttings up into the seedlings. Lo and behold I even found some slugs on the rosemary using it as a "ladder" to get higher into the seedling to dine on those top yummy leaves. Aargh!!! Finally, forget blackberry or bramble cuttings. I scattered some of those around the seedlings too - the idea being that the slugs will cut themselves to death on the them. Even the edges of the blackberry leaves have little stickers. I had covered one bramble leaf with oat bran and there was a slug on a leaf - a tablecloth - having his oat bran steak dinner! I just hope that the ones I threw into the blackberry patch do not make their way back to my seedlings. They are all going into a bucket of salt water from now on and I will be checking nightly for the next two weeks to break their breeding cycle.
Could it be that seeing "The King's Speech" spurred me on to find my gardening voice, to stop stammering around with these little critters and to stand up and be the king in my own castle, I mean, garden?
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