![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Place a penny about one every foot around your pond....it's an old trick
learned with doing flower beds :-) It works great. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Mary kate" wrote in message
... Place a penny about one every foot around your pond....it's an old trick learned with doing flower beds :-) It works great. What does that do? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Gareee©" wrote in message ... "Mary kate" wrote in message ... Place a penny about one every foot around your pond....it's an old trick learned with doing flower beds :-) It works great. What does that do? The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. But more then likely, they'll just go around the penny. A thin copper wire laid around the perimeter of the pond or flower bed would work just as well. As long as there are no snails & slugs on the inside of the enclosed wired off area. Rose gardeners will often wrap copper wire or copper tape around the base of the rose canes to prevent snails from climbing up. Snooze |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Good to know.. thanks!
"Snooze" wrote in message ... "Gareee©" wrote in message ... "Mary kate" wrote in message ... Place a penny about one every foot around your pond....it's an old trick learned with doing flower beds :-) It works great. What does that do? The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. But more then likely, they'll just go around the penny. A thin copper wire laid around the perimeter of the pond or flower bed would work just as well. As long as there are no snails & slugs on the inside of the enclosed wired off area. Rose gardeners will often wrap copper wire or copper tape around the base of the rose canes to prevent snails from climbing up. Snooze |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Snooze" wrote in message ... "Gareee©" wrote in message ... "Mary kate" wrote in message ... Place a penny about one every foot around your pond....it's an old trick learned with doing flower beds :-) It works great. What does that do? The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. But more then likely, they'll just go around the penny. A thin copper wire laid around the perimeter of the pond or flower bed would work just as well. As long as there are no snails & slugs on the inside of the enclosed wired off area. Rose gardeners will often wrap copper wire or copper tape around the base of the rose canes to prevent snails from climbing up. Forgive me...but this sounds like folklore. I checked around google, and it seems to be common knowledge! How strange! Don't you need two types of metal to create a current? Weird. You learn something every day. Anyway, I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. BV. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() BV wrote I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. Your karma is going to go off the scale ;-) I use a pellet product around my hosta and impatiens, it is non-toxic to other critters. Seems to work just fine. When I had koi I'd toss land snails to them, that is when I found out koi have teeth! kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
http://www.miniscience.com/projects/PotatoElectricity/
is the penny 100% copper? http://www.extension.umn.edu/distrib...re/DG7561.html " Copper is an effective barrier to slugs. Copper strips or tape sold specifically for slug control can be purchased from garden suppliers. Caution: The sharp edges of some products may cause safety problems, especially for young children. Copper barriers are most practical for small gardens and containers. Diatomaceous earth (tiny fossilized skeletons of ancient aquatic diatoms) is moderately effective as a slug barrier. When slugs come in contact with diatomaceous earth, it is abrasive to their skin. Diatomaceous earth is most effective when used in dry conditions and has little effect when it absorbs moisture. There are several pesticides that may be used to supplement the above nonchemical tactics. Iron phosphate (e.g. Escar-Go, Sluggo), applied to the soil as granules, is a less toxic bait for slugs. Iron phosphate is mixed with a food product that draws slugs to the bait. Once slugs consume this bait, they stop feeding and die three to six days later. Chemical slug baits often contain metaldehyde (e.g. Deadline, Defender), available as a granular or liquid paste. When metaldehyde is eaten by slugs, it destroys their ability to move and digest food. Apply it to the soil near slug-infested plants. Metaldehyde is more effective during warm, dry weather. It is best to apply metaldehyde after a rain storm but when sunny weather is predicted. Copper compounds (copper silicate and copper sulfate) are effective repellents. They are usually mixed with water, then sprayed on plants. Copper products repel slugs but do not usually kill them. Do not spray copper compounds near baits; slugs will avoid baits contaminated with them. " "Benign Vanilla" wrote: Forgive me...but this sounds like folklore. I checked around google, and it seems to be common knowledge! How strange! Don't you need two types of metal to create a current? Weird. You learn something every day. Anyway, I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. BV. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs
secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. Forgive me...but this sounds like folklore. I checked around google, and it seems to be common knowledge! How strange! Don't you need two types of metal to create a current? Weird. You learn something every day. Anyway, I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. Copper works to repel snails (1) but I've always doubted the mechanism is electric current. I suspect copper sulfate and other copper compounds on the penny, copper is highly toxic to invertebrates. (1) Organic Gardening magazine once did a comparison of all the snail repellants on the market and copper foil was the clear winner, might have been the only one 100% effective, I can't recall... |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I am still wanting to cut the affected (ugly) plants and sprinkle salt
around the pond. Cant anyone tell me that would be ok? How about spritzing with salt water? These are not IN the pond but around it. On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 20:05:30 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Burgess wrote: The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. Forgive me...but this sounds like folklore. I checked around google, and it seems to be common knowledge! How strange! Don't you need two types of metal to create a current? Weird. You learn something every day. Anyway, I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. Copper works to repel snails (1) but I've always doubted the mechanism is electric current. I suspect copper sulfate and other copper compounds on the penny, copper is highly toxic to invertebrates. (1) Organic Gardening magazine once did a comparison of all the snail repellants on the market and copper foil was the clear winner, might have been the only one 100% effective, I can't recall... |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have used salt to kill slugs, but the way that I have done it, you see the
slug, pour some salt on him and he dehydrates. Pouring salt on the ground might work if he gets to the salt before the rain, or sprinkler system dissolves it and washes it into the soil. Salt in the soil works as a good vegatative inhibitor, in that it will kill plants and prevent new ones from growing, if the concentration gets high enough. I doubt that salt on the ground would be very effective. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "jammer" wrote in message ... I am still wanting to cut the affected (ugly) plants and sprinkle salt around the pond. Cant anyone tell me that would be ok? How about spritzing with salt water? These are not IN the pond but around it. On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 20:05:30 +0000 (UTC), Andrew Burgess wrote: The copper on the pennies reacts with the mucus that the snails & slugs secrete. The reaction creates a slight electrical current, strong enough to discourage them from crossing the copper. Forgive me...but this sounds like folklore. I checked around google, and it seems to be common knowledge! How strange! Don't you need two types of metal to create a current? Weird. You learn something every day. Anyway, I am off to collect slugs. I plan to power my pump with them and some pennies. Copper works to repel snails (1) but I've always doubted the mechanism is electric current. I suspect copper sulfate and other copper compounds on the penny, copper is highly toxic to invertebrates. (1) Organic Gardening magazine once did a comparison of all the snail repellants on the market and copper foil was the clear winner, might have been the only one 100% effective, I can't recall... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Snails, crabs, and Xenia dying | Andy Black | Reefs | 4 | May 27th 04 04:19 AM |
snails dying | Mike Silver | Reefs | 10 | May 22nd 04 01:53 AM |
snails from nowhere | un Edge | General | 11 | May 9th 04 02:31 AM |
Snails at LFS... | Earl D Fitzgerald | General | 6 | August 16th 03 11:57 AM |
Snails | Barrie Smart | General | 10 | July 10th 03 10:28 AM |