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#71
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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... |
#72
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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... |
#73
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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... |
#74
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One thing that is very good for getting rid of slugs in your garden is a
shallow bowl of beer sunken level with the soil line. Use that old half a bottle of beer that was left over last night to refill the bowl every other day or so. Works good but leaves a slimey mess in the bowl. ![]() -Pat They go out smiling |
#75
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![]() Jammer, toads eat slugs! Just wait for your baby toadlets to grow up and snarf them down. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
#77
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Bud is the best for slug bait (I think it is the hops...)... The only bad
thing about using this method is that if you forget it for a bit you will find your container filled with a very, VERY bad smelling concoction..... "O3raledale" wrote in message ... One thing that is very good for getting rid of slugs in your garden is a shallow bowl of beer sunken level with the soil line. Use that old half a bottle of beer that was left over last night to refill the bowl every other day or so. Works good but leaves a slimey mess in the bowl. ![]() -Pat They go out smiling |
#78
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"D Kat" wrote in message
... Bud is the best for slug bait (I think it is the hops...)... Do they prefer low carb, or regular? -- Gareee© Homepage: http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm Custom Figures, Wallpapers and more! |
#79
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I have had 1 snail in each riser of my UGFs in 2 55gal tanks for a
long time. Thats eight snails and they keep the risers spotless. I got them from the creek for that purpose and got a case of ick. Jungle's ick med fixed that. That was a year ago. Since then everythings cool. They showed up in my pond but so has a lot of other wildlife. I only see them above the water level at waterfalls and other shallows because of the bluegills On Sun, 30 May 2004 15:48:40 GMT, wrote: http://puregold.aquaria.net/pg/disea....htm#POTASSIUM I should add... PP was used against athletes foot fungus very successfully... until "modern" medicines were developed that didnt stain the feet. Ingrid ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: People should have the same heebie-jeebies about bleach. Just because we can drink it in small amounts doesn't mean it can't cause problems over time. IMHO, PP (and there's been a later thread now directing people where to get it) is far less toxic in the liquid form than full strength liquid bleach. I can easily detox it with hydrogen peroxide, and there are no stinky, eye watering, fumes. The truth is, both should be handled with care. ~ jan ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ 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. |
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