Before you go out and buy something, consider these approaches to ridding your garden of pests using things you probably already have at home.
June 30, 2015
Before you go out and buy something, consider these approaches to ridding your garden of pests using things you probably already have at home.
We love our herbs and spices, but most garden pests find them unpalatable or even lethal. Sprinkle any of the following around your plants and watch leaf-hungry pests go in search of another spot to dine.
To keep grasshoppers from munching on your ornamentals and vegetables, fill several wide-mouth jars half full with a water/molasses solution (eight parts water to one part molasses) and place them in problem areas. The pests will be attracted by the smell, dive in and drown.
Rid garden plants and houseplants of aphids, whiteflies and other insect pests with this garlic-based spray. If you don't have a sprayer, use a well-rinsed cleaning product spray bottle. No matter your equipment, be sure to cover both sides of the leaves. Use only dishwashing liquid in this recipe (not laundry or dishwasher detergent) and store the spray as you would any insecticide: in a capped and labelled bottle kept in a childproof cabinet.
Earwigs are partial to clematis, chrysanthemums, dahlias and gladiolus — so how do you give the little buggers the brush-off? Not with a whiskbroom but with oil, an earwig non-botanical favourite. Pour a pool of corn oil onto a saucer, set it on the ground amid your flowers and the pests will crawl into the saucer and drown.
The gastropod gourmets we know as slugs and snails have a special taste for dahlias, delphiniums, hostas, lupines, marigolds, zinnias and almost any flower or veggie seedling. Luckily, there are ways to deprive them of their meals.
Your garden will flourish and grow once you've taken care of those pesky garden pests for good!
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