Beer & Snails
- Subject: [cg] Beer & Snails
- From: H* A*
- Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2002 15:21:39 -0400
Snail Beer Taste Test:
Ballantine's India Pale Ale - Usually found in the North East in 40 ounce,
screw top bottles seems to do best by Hell's Kitchen snails, who drown
happy.
Dead serious: We have a French chef ( works in a local hotel) who gardens
next to me with good 'ol buddy Andy Padian who will come by at odd hours and
pluck them for his own use. Evidently fresh escargot ( rather than the stuff
that comes in cans with shells on the side to make them look authentic) is a
real treat:
Raising livestock may be more of a chore than some of you may want, but when
given lemons, one can make lemonade or with snails one can cook Escargots
à la bourguignonne":
http://escargot.free.fr/eng/cooking.htm
Let the good times rolls!
Adam Honigman
Clinton Community Garden
-----Original Message-----
From: Rebecca Crouse [b*@hotmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 09, 2002 2:54 PM
To: community_garden@mallorn.com
Subject: [cg] warding off snails
Non-toxic Snail Control:
Slugs could be attracted to your eggplant because A) They enjoy dark, moist
environments and your eggplant is a prime location; B) They feed on aphids
and caterpillars and either your or someone nearby's plot is providing them
with a meal; C) They enjoy alkaline soil, which yours may be; or D) All of
the above.
Non-toxic Slug Control options include:
Handpicking.
Lightly watering in the late afternoon will bring snails out of hiding and
make for more successful handpicking. Look under leaves and on stems -
especially any that seem to be drooping with unusual weight. Lift boards,
bricks, rocks, piles of clippings, flower pots, etc... Place any found slugs
in a screw top jar and throw it away in a manner that it will not break.
(Soapy water in the jar will also kill slugs.)
Thoroughly cultivating soil.
Because slugs use soil crevices for daytime hide-aways, thorough cultivation
of the soil with a rotary plow will rapidly reduce the numbers of slugs in
the area. They are killed by the action fo the machinery.
Barriers.
A two-foot wide track of sharply granulated cinder bits, wood ash, copper
screening, or diatomaceous earth (gardening, not swimming pool filter grade)
around the garden will function as a barrier to slugs. Cinder bits are also
effective when wet.
Beer.
A pan of beer set on the ground with the rim extending 3/4" above ground
will trap slugs. Beer attracts the slugs and then anesthetizes them. Place a
second pan on sticks about 8" above the soil level pan to act as a canopy
and keep out diluting rain, prevent evaporation, and keep out thirsty dogs.
Different species of snails will actually prefer different brews, so if your
first try doesn't seem all that effective, try something
lighter/darker/maltier. Barriers work well with beer traps for slug control.
Good luck!
Becky
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______________________________________________________
The American Community Gardening Association listserve is only one of ACGA's services to community gardeners. To learn more about the ACGA and to find out how to join, please go to http://www.communitygarden.org
To post an e-mail to the list: community_garden@mallorn.com
To subscribe, unsubscribe or change your subscription: https://secure.mallorn.com/mailman/listinfo/community_garden