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Old 22-06-2004, 03:05 AM
RichToyBox
 
Posts: n/a
Default SLUGS and salt $.o1

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...