Secrets of a Slug-Free Garden

March 23, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Gardening Tips & Info

You can stop these leaf munching machines.

Recently, I read that these nasty little creatures have like 2700 teeth. Thank heavens they aren’t meat eaters! There are 40 different types of slugs found in North America but only three of them are commonly found; Gray Field Slugs, Common Garden Slugs and in the Northwest they have the Black Slug that can grow to a mammoth six inches in length.

Common garden slug

Image courtesy of photogirl7 - CreativeCommons

Recently, I read that these nasty little creatures have like 2700 teeth. Thank heavens they aren’t meat eaters! There are 40 different types of slugs found in North America but only three of them are commonly found; Gray Field Slugs, Common Garden Slugs and in the Northwest they have the Black Slug that can grow to a mammoth six inches in length.

I’m sure any gardener, no matter how novice or expert, will whole heartedly agreed that slugs are disturbing on so many levels. There is one additional bonus to having a drought garden. Slugs don’t like arid conditions! Unfortunately, hostas are not at their finest baking in all day sun without a good deal of moisture. In the warmer regions of the US, it was beyond impossible for even sun tolerant hostas to survive the solar intensity.

No one wants hosta leaves that look like Swiss cheese!

While hostas seem to be the number one slug attracting garden plant, they do heartily enjoy feasting on the foliage of a number of other flowering plants. For the most part, you will find slug damage occurs in the moist, shady areas of your yard… namely the place that hostas flourish. The effects of these slimy pests are also found to be rampant in the vegetable garden where tomatoes, cabbages and beans are only part of slug population’s vegetation feast.

The bold, luscious leaves of hostas are so addictive to plant lovers. It appears they offer a unanimously tasty treat to all manner of wild critters as well. If you aren’t battling Bambi, it’s the rabbits and if you are saved from the first two pests, you will without a doubt have problems with slugs. You’ve probably seen several homemade methods for getting rid of slimy slugs in your flower garden and vegetable gardens too.

Beer in a shallow pan …

If you are going to do this, make sure you buy the cheapest brand of beer. Beer works really well, but you’ll have to keep replacing it in the pans. Rain and irrigation dilutes it. High temperatures cause rapid evaporation. Best results come from putting out fresh brewery traps early every evening. You’ll want to empty each pan readily, as the slug corpses can start smelling pretty ripe after a day in 90°F temperatures. Not recommended for weak tummies! The beer must be replaced every day as soon as leaves emerge to be effective.

Rock salt used in mounded lines as a slug barrier …

Slugs cannot live after they have slimed their way over a pile of salt. The fastest way to kill a slug is to pour salt on them. They quickly dry right up like a worm on a hot sidewalk after heavy rainfall. However, hostas are highly sensitive to salt burn foliage damage so caution of placement and longevity is recommended with this DIY slug control method. The salt melts and runs into the soil with normal irrigation and rainfall. Too high of a sodium content in the soil can be harmful to many ornamental and food garden plants.

Sand and gravel slug deterrent …

Slugs are slimy because they travel on the disgusting mucous beneath them. They are highly capable of traversing gravel to get to the feast on the other side. Sharp sand can be effective as long as it remains in place. Slugs have a hard time being mobile when that gooey fluid they ride on is clogged up with cutting sand. Every heavy rain or stiff wind that comes along will make it necessary to keep constant watch over your sand barrier berms. All it takes is one slug to break through and you’ll have holey hostas until the following spring.

Container growing to raise plants above soil level …

I hate to burst your bubble, but slugs will climb up the side of pots and containers. This is not an effective slug control method at all. They’ll truly adore the moist shade the pot gives them and can enter the pot through a drainage hole and slime their way along the edge to hosta heaven up above. They don’t mind a little mud.

Partially submerged container grown hostas …

While hostas do adore moisture, they still need drainage. This method I’ve seen bantered about is not what I would deem wise. While it may be true that slugs cannot swim, your container cannot drain at all if the bottom 2 inches is below water level! This will cause two serious health problems over long periods of time.

  1. Root rot, which will ultimately kill the hosta plant.
  2. Poor drainage can cause fungus to attack your hosta foliage that is unsightly and will continue to reinfect new leaves without good anti-fungal applications to both soil and foliage.

Slub eating foliage

Photo courtesy of photogirl7 – CreativeCommons license


Nematodes as organic slug control …

Using beneficial soil nematodes is far more popular in Europe than it is the US. These are microscopic worms that feed on other insects and wormlike soil dwellers. There are a limited number of places to purchase beneficial nematodes online. I would recommend you make sure you get the right nematodes for your climate. There are different organisms for cold regions than those that thrive in warm growing zones. Nematodes are effective for about 6 months and do an excellent job at controlling not only slugs but all manner of undesirable pests like fleas, cutworms, armyworms, caterpillars and more. Beneficial nematodes are not inexpensive, but they do work well and rid your yard and garden of far more pests than slugs.

Sluggo brand biodegradable slug bait …

This slimy plant pest control product is applied in early evening in a sprinkled area or individual plant treatment. The slugs eat the granules and feasting ceases immediately. It takes three to six days for them to die after ingesting the bait. Not a pretty picture if you are plagued with a lot of slugs. This slug bait contains things found in fertilizers and is safe for your pets. Sluggo is effective if you keep on top of reapplication and is perhaps more economical than other commercially sold slug control methods. This merchant has an excellent price on Sluggo bait.

BugGeta Snail & Slug Killer …

Talk about beauty in effect! You can get both Bug-Geta and BugGeta Plus formulations. BugGeta Plus controls far more undesirable garden pests. This long-lasting product from Ortho works very well in doing away with cutworms, armyworms, earwigs and more. Sprinkle it around and water the granules in and the slug population will be a historical occurrence in no time at all. Heavy rainfall and irrigation will cause you to have to reapply it more often than the package states. Under normal rainfall it works 1-month per application by drying out any soft skinned pest rapidly from the outside in. Don’t worry about your pets eating it, none of them will find it at all delightful smelling. (Contains Bitrex and Metaldehyde.)

Effective slug control can also be done with plants.

Astrantia Star of Summer

Astrantia Star of Summer

Beautiful reblooming Astrantia drives away slugs!

Astrantia Roma Astrantia Roma

To learn more about the ornamental perennials,  shrubs, annuals and blooming bulbs that drive slugs away is very simple here on Lost In The Flowers.

Astrantia Snow Star

Astrantia Snow Star

To learn more about slug control using natural and organic methods, you will want to read … Plants Slugs Don’t Like To Eat

New Hip Couture for Fall

March 15, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Shrubs

Delightful yellow summer blooms transform to fall berry beauty.

Designer colored berries for outdoors and indoor bouquets.

Introducing Mystical™ Beauty St. John’s Wort

Hypericum 'Mystical Beauty'

Image courtesy of Novalis © 2008

Large salmon-pink berries to enjoy for months on end.

St. John’s Wort for your landscape is not the same type of Hypericum as those grown as ornamental plants. There are 27 species of Hypericum, spanning from ground cover to shrub type plants. Very few of them are used as an ornamental plant. Hypericum calycinum, which is used as a ground cover. H. androsaemum is the most common shrub form used in ornamental applications. Common St. John’s Wort or Hypericum perforatum is the plant used for herbal remedies and is best placed in an herb garden.

Hips of Hypericum (berries) are highly valued by florists and are in the top 50 cut flowers grown for the floral trade. True “St. John’s Wort” has been cultivated for centuries for medicinal uses. In modern landscapes Hypericum is valued for its drought tolerance with the creeping varieties being a common ground cover on steep, sunny slopes. The yellow blooms add color from late spring until late summer, replaced by bright colored berries in September that hang on through winter. In warmer zones, the plant is semi-evergreen.

Mystical Red Star Hypericum

Mystical™ Red Star St. John’s Wort © 2008

Image courtesy of Bailey Nurseries © 2008

Large red berries that are sure to brighten your garden in fall.

Hypericum can be highly susceptible to a foliage disfiguring disease known as Rust. There is no chemical cure for this rust problem. Rust starts out as yellow and red spots on the leaves, then by midsummer, the foliage turns an unsightly brown making the entire dead plant look. The old fashioned solution was to shear the entire plant off close to the ground. When it grows back it will be disease free. New cultivar hybrid Hypericum x inodorum was specifically bred to be rust resistant especially for the floral trade. Known as the Mystical™ Hypericum series, this group of newcomers is extremely rust resistant because florists do not buy stems with foliar diseases.

Mystical Black Hypericum

Mystical™ Black St. John’s Wort

Image courtesy of Novalis © 2008

Stunning large black berries that will complement the vibrant colors of  fall.

In response to the floral trade’s demands for bigger, brighter berries and the absence of marred foliage we have exciting new garden and landscape shrubs. The most highly berry-iferous Hypericum plants in existence are now coming into the market for homeowners to buy. Prepare to get really excited about a summer shower of trouble-free yellow blooms and a choice of berry colors for fall color. This group of plants known as the Hypericum Mystical™ series from the Plants That Work® collection. Now you enjoy masses of large, designer colored berries on beautifully branched plants.

Mystical Orange Hypericum

Mystical™ Orange Hypericum

Image courtesy of Novalis © 2008

Perfect for a sunny planting bed where fall color will be cluster of large orange berries.

Don’t worry about cutting stems of berries for bouquets, or even cutting whole plants back hard to clean up a rust attack. Hypericum just grows right back … it is one tough and easy to grow shrub. Get a floral pro touch growing your own decorator colored berries without unsightly rust damage on these colorful shrubs. Mystical™ Hypericums are a cross between H. androsaemum and H. hircinum to reduce the threat of rust.  All require full sun and moist well-drained soil, mature at 2.5’-3’ high and wide. (Hardy in zones 5-9.) Lovely as a single specimen plant or arranged in showy drifts of color.

Mystical Sweetheart Hypericum

Mystical™ Sweetheart Hypericum

Image courtesy of Conard Pyle © 2008

Berries are small on this one, but oh so lovely in white with a pink blush.

Look for these easy to grow, low maintenance landscape and garden shrubs in nurseries and garden centers that carry the Plants That Work Collection of perennials, shrubs and trees. You may find some limited availability as early as Spring 2009.

Trademark and Nomenclature

Hypericum x inodorata Mystical™ Orange ‘Kolmoran’ PP#13,411

Hypericum x inodorata Mystical™ Beauty ‘Kolmblack’ PP#14,911

Hypericum x inodorata Mystical™ Red Star ‘Kolmred’ PP#13,554

Hypericum x inodorata Mystical™ Sweetheart ‘Kolmsweet’ PP#13,533

Hypericum x inodorata Mystical™ Beauty’Kolmbeau’ PP#13,532