gloucester girl Posted September 24, 2016 Share Posted September 24, 2016 Any advice of how to control or preferably get rid of the following pests: caterpillars, curl grubs (cockchafers/beetle larvae) and snails. Last year we moved to a house with a concrete garden so started growing flowers and veggies in pots. Between the 3 of these little sods, nearly everything died or just got eaten. The curl grubs were the worst as it took me months to figure out what was going on and as they live in the soil, digging up the plant and replacing the soil was the only option then. So I have decided to get the little buggers at the start of a new growing season. This is what I have been doing so far: snails - they laugh in the face of snail/slug pellets and I don't like using them anyway (no slugs though). I tried a beer trap (as advised by the internet) and they ignored it. So I am hand picking them and killing them. Seems the most effective, if time-consuming method so far. I have found that they don't like geraniums and fuchsias, so I am growing more of these. caterpillars - these are steadily munching through my geraniums and suspect that they will go for the veggies once they start coming through. Using chemical sprays at the moment, although the current one - Yates pyrethrum insect pest - has helped a bit, but they are still creating holes in the leaves, so it is not that effective. curl grubs - I have found around 10 already in my pots. My husband decided to help me in the garden and planted about 4 eggplants in a pot that needed to be transplanted once they germinated - that's when I found them (surprising as last year they were the one vegetable that seemed to be immune to these grubs). I started using Richgo Lawn and beetle grub killa as a soil drench about a month ago, which did not work one bit. Anyway I have changed the soil and am now trying Eco Neem, which is expensive. I will have to wait to see if it has been effective (although how? dig up the plant to check?) Again I have not found them in pots of geraniums, fuchsias, marguerite daisies and chillis. I am experimenting with pouring a dilute detergent solution over the soil and hoping that they come to the surface, then I will happily feed them to the birds. Thanks for reading (those that are still here). Any advice will be massively appreciated. (If you detect a note of obsession, you'd be right. I've wanted to grow my own vegetables for so long - coming from a much colder climate - that I was hugely peed off last year to lose nearly all my plants to these little buggers. Although my gardening skills may account for some of the failure!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
srh82 Posted September 24, 2016 Share Posted September 24, 2016 Would a few chooks help? :wink: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gloucester girl Posted September 24, 2016 Author Share Posted September 24, 2016 No space for chickens. Also, I can't keep plants alive. Wouldn't like to experiment with chickens! But thanks for the suggestion :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rammygirl Posted September 24, 2016 Share Posted September 24, 2016 Have you asked your neighbours? Likely they might have had similar issues and may have a solution. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
newjez Posted September 24, 2016 Share Posted September 24, 2016 Any advice of how to control or preferably get rid of the following pests: caterpillars, curl grubs (cockchafers/beetle larvae) and snails. Last year we moved to a house with a concrete garden so started growing flowers and veggies in pots. Between the 3 of these little sods, nearly everything died or just got eaten. The curl grubs were the worst as it took me months to figure out what was going on and as they live in the soil, digging up the plant and replacing the soil was the only option then. So I have decided to get the little buggers at the start of a new growing season. This is what I have been doing so far: snails - they laugh in the face of snail/slug pellets and I don't like using them anyway (no slugs though). I tried a beer trap (as advised by the internet) and they ignored it. So I am hand picking them and killing them. Seems the most effective, if time-consuming method so far. I have found that they don't like geraniums and fuchsias, so I am growing more of these. caterpillars - these are steadily munching through my geraniums and suspect that they will go for the veggies once they start coming through. Using chemical sprays at the moment, although the current one - Yates pyrethrum insect pest - has helped a bit, but they are still creating holes in the leaves, so it is not that effective. curl grubs - I have found around 10 already in my pots. My husband decided to help me in the garden and planted about 4 eggplants in a pot that needed to be transplanted once they germinated - that's when I found them (surprising as last year they were the one vegetable that seemed to be immune to these grubs). I started using Richgo Lawn and beetle grub killa as a soil drench about a month ago, which did not work one bit. Anyway I have changed the soil and am now trying Eco Neem, which is expensive. I will have to wait to see if it has been effective (although how? dig up the plant to check?) Again I have not found them in pots of geraniums, fuchsias, marguerite daisies and chillis. I am experimenting with pouring a dilute detergent solution over the soil and hoping that they come to the surface, then I will happily feed them to the birds. Thanks for reading (those that are still here). Any advice will be massively appreciated. (If you detect a note of obsession, you'd be right. I've wanted to grow my own vegetables for so long - coming from a much colder climate - that I was hugely peed off last year to lose nearly all my plants to these little buggers. Although my gardening skills may account for some of the failure!) Beer traps are good. Or nematodes http://www.slugoff.co.uk/killing-slugs/nematodes For caterpillars can you encourage birds? Or other predators? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bobj Posted September 24, 2016 Share Posted September 24, 2016 For snails, a salt line around the plants. Pick off the caterpillars and put them safely in the bush. Dunno for cockchafers...NSW had a huge tree die-back in the 80s Cheers, Bobj. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Melbpom Posted September 26, 2016 Share Posted September 26, 2016 I've found copper tape (maybe use copper wire) around the outside of terracotta posts works to prevent snails climbing up and eating the strawberries. Doesn't help with the possums though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Suzukiscottie Posted September 26, 2016 Share Posted September 26, 2016 Coffee grounds Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Melbpom Posted September 26, 2016 Share Posted September 26, 2016 Coffee grounds For the snails, or the possums? or pests in general? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Suzukiscottie Posted September 26, 2016 Share Posted September 26, 2016 For the snails, or the possums? or pests in general? Sorry, should have been more specific. Mainly for the slimy unwanted garden pests, and ants too. But i just googled it to check, and there as many reports supporting the use of coffee grounds for pest control as there are saying that it's useless! Might be worth a trial with some carefully placed rings of coffee around plants susceptible to slug/snail encroachment. We seemed to have some success, but maybe it was just luck! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.