Garden Slugs Control Panama City FL

Throw slugs that you have collected dead or alive and put in the compost. The live ones stay put and help break down the compost. It just proves thatthere is good in everything. The dead ones are full of protein and will add to the compost.

Gulf Coast Hydroseed
850-872-1522
3307 Kings Rd
Panama City, FL
Pettis Termite & Pest Control
(850) 235-3429
7103 Highway 77
Southport, FL
Maple Street Natives Inc.
(321) 729-6857
7619 Henry Ave.
W. Melbourne, FL
ecosource Home & Garden
(954) 636-4826
437 N.E. 8th Ave.
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
Rain Tank Depot
(631) 587-1812
641 sw 7th St
Pompano Beach, FL
Terminix
(888) 304-7302
1337 West 19th Street
Panama City, FL
Orkin - Branch #232
(877) 250-1652
4200 N Davis Hwy
Panama City, FL
Preffered Source
(239) 200-8355
5183 Cortina Ct
Naples, FL
Debbie DeLoach, Ph.D., Garden Consultant
(352) 331-2691
8910 NW 4th Street
Gainesville, FL
NJ Supply Ltd.
(314) 575-9285
5100 60th Street East Lot N4
Bradenton, FL
Data Provided by:
  
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

The Slug

They have an insatiable appetite and feed mainly at night and can eat double its body weight in a day. I don’t know who took the time to count, but I read they have 27,000 teeth. Could this be?

Slugs are one of the most destructive and difficult pests to control but they do play an important role in ecology by eating decomposing matter.

They love dark, moist spots. With this in mind the first approach is to eliminate habitats by cleaning and hoeing your garden regularly as slugs and eggs hide under the weeds. It is important to remove all vegetable refuse, as well as bricks, boards and piles of debris they can hide under.

Throw slugs that you have collected dead or alive and put in the compost. The live ones stay put and help break down the compost. It just proves that there is good in everything. The dead ones are full of protein and will add to the compost.

Plants that are resistant to slugs include Phlox, Campanula, Hererocallis, and Mentha.

Here are some solutions:

1. Slugs avoid crawling over anything dry, dusty or scratchy, such as lime, diatomaceous earth, cinders, coarse sawdust, gravel or sand. These make great barriers to keep out slugs.

2. Epson Salts sprinkled on the soil will help deter slugs and also help prevent Magnesium deficiency in your plants.

3. Vinegar, a good ingredient for slug sprays and removing slug slime.

4. Spread salt around your plants. Salt dries them out so they won’t go near it.

5. Collect human, dog, or cat hair and put around your plants, not only will the slugs not go on it, but it will also keep a lot of the little critters away also.

6. When you find a slime trail, destroy the track so other slugs do not follow. They will follow each others trail. There are certain plants that slugs hate like the strong smell of mint, chives, garlic, geraniums, foxgloves and fennel. Plant them around the edge of your garden to keep them out. These plants also discourage Japanese beetles.

7. Put stone paths along your flower beds.

8. Put Copper of foil barriers around plants that the slugs are eating. When the slugs cross them they are given a small shock. This also works for snails.

9. If you are find slugs in your potted plants, put petroleum jelly around the base and tops of your plant containers and watch them slip and slide.

10. Fill a shallow bowl with beer and wait overnight. The slugs love it. Dispose of the slugged brew by adding it to your comport.

11. Another...

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