May Lotito wrote:Thanks Noah for sharing! The spots do look like bacterial or fungal infections. Do you recall any unusual weather before the spots showed up, like heavy rain immediately followed by sunny days? That is the recipe for fungal outbreak and sometimes sudden death in my plants. Top dressing with compost and building up healthy soil help keeping pathogens in check. Mints root very easily so you will get the plant growing back just fine.
hopefully i can edit that and correct it now.
Jay Angler wrote:
I loved your long response - you summarized the key points well, and gave us feedback as to what you've tried and what you're hoping to try.
Welcome the nicest, most helpful, most supportive site on the world wide web. I hope you've found a home here!
(and I agree with the duck idea - duck eggs are awesome for baking. Pets with benefits!)
Oliver Huynh wrote:Hello,
I would add two things that seem to work better for me this year :
- Never water on the surface. Filling a planting hole with water before planting instead of watering after, buried drip lines and ollas do not attract slugs as much. Above-ground watering on a dry soil in the evening can be a death sentence.
- Slugs seem to be quite disoriented when an orderly garden becomes a urban jungle. The more greenery I have, the less slugs I see and the less damage.
Have a nice evening,
Oliver
Joao Winckler wrote:Yeah urban gardens are rough for slugs. No hedgehogs, no ground beetles, nothing to keep them in check. Nematodes are the only thing that's actually worked for me, everything else just slows them down a bit. Worth doing in spring before the population explodes.
Jay Angler wrote:
One year when slugs were particularly bad, I put down some damp, flat boards. The slugs would hide under them, so I'd tilt them up and sometimes kill as many as 20 slugs with "percussive maintenance".
Jay Angler wrote:
I know of some people who go out with a flashlight after dark and cull them that way. Not my favorite technique, but I've used it and will try it tonight as something ate my baby Marigolds and I would like to exact revenge.
Jay Angler wrote:
And if a rant will help you feel better ...
thank you
Jill Dyer wrote:
I bet a yeast in water + a little sugar would also work
Jill Dyer wrote:
Crushed eggshells surrounding plants is a folk remedy and allegedly doesn't work
Jill Dyer wrote:
I've seen a fitting for the top of a fence that rolls and puts cats off balance
Jill Dyer wrote:
Edit to add: - found this further down. . .https://permies.com/t/373413/yeast-water-garden
Thank you
Tereza Okava wrote:
I am also dealing with am invading cat right now. The only real thing I've found has been to be outside and throw things at it-- although the damn thing still comes back!
They do come back for a while but they eventually seem to learn. For the most part i have the cats under control at the moment, until the new cat on the block turns up, then it will all start again.
Mart Hale wrote:
Bill Mulliison used to say, if you have an snail problem you have a lack of ducks problem.
Mart Hale wrote:
Now, I am looking into nematodes that do snails in .....
G Freden wrote:I love my ducks; they are the ultimate slug and snail predator, and they are not destructive amongst the plants like chickens are. However as I recently learned, they may not be ideal as urban livestock:
https://permies.com/t/371325/Noisy-ducks-waking-neighbours
Nancy Reading wrote:
Try leaving a gap at the bottom of your fences (if applicable) so that hedgehogs can get through.
Nancy Reading wrote:
Cats are supposed to dislike citrus
Nancy Reading wrote:
I used to make sure there was plenty of organic litter on the ground as mulch to encourage beetles
John Weiland wrote:I'm sure I posted it in another thread some years back.... Not for improved growth, but as a slug bait. Yeast + sugar + water, mixed, poured into empty cat-food cans that are sunk into the ground so that the can lip is at ground level. Slugs are very attracted to the 'bouquet' and crawl in and drown.
....only we had one more variable. After the concoction had fermented, our pot-bellied pig got into the garden and drank all of the brew. In the aftermath, wife and I concluded that the pig leaned more towards the 'mean drunk' side of inebriation. We switched to diatomaceous earth for slug control after that episode.... ;-/