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Old 05-07-2007, 11:16 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Dick Chambers Dick Chambers is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jul 2007
Posts: 2
Default Plague of snails.


"Mary Fisher" wrote in message
. net...

"Dick Chambers" wrote in message
...
I have lived in the same house in Leeds for the last 33 years. During the
first 27 (approximately) of these years, I hardly ever saw a snail,
although
I did have a large number of slugs. During the last 6 (approx) years,
there
has been a dramatic increase in the number of snails. On a wet evening
after
dark, if I go to post a letter in the local mail box, my feet
inadvertently
crunch a snail every tenth step, on average. I have just removed and
killed
about 50 of them from my bed of petunias, the bed being a mere 5 square
metres in area. The snails are thick on the ground. It ihas reached the
point where I would describe it as a plague.

Is this problem local to Leeds, or has there been the same problem
throughout the UK? What has caused the sudden increase in their
population?

I do not accept "global warming" as an answer -- far too easy, facile,
and
probably wrong. With global warming, Leeds nowadays has the same climate
as
Berkshire did 35 years ago when I lived there. Berkshire in 1972 did not
have the plague of snails I am experiencing here in Leeds in 2007.

Richard Chambers Leeds UK.


I've lived in the same house in Leeds for the last 43 years. In the first
few years I saw a lot of snails but few slugs. I haven't noticed any
difference in the small variations since then.

A few weeks ago I went to post a letter (honestly!) on a wet night. We've
had a lot of those recently. I noticed a huge number of snails on the
footpath so on my way back I collected them and saved them until morning
to give to my hens.

I haven't seen this phenomenon at any other time - but all that means is
that I haven't seen it, not that it hasn't occurred.

I certainly wouldn't describe the number as a plague, that's far too easy,
facile and probably wrong. Nor is it a phenomenon (I don't see it as a
problem) peculiar to Leeds, a son in Chippenham (Wiltshire) has similar
variations in numbers of snails, a daughter has very many of both slugs
and snails despite having ducks and hens - but she lives in Wales where
it's always wet. A son in Leeds (Kirkstall) has only recently begun
gardening and he's very upset by the destruction slugs and snails have
wrought, he says he doesn't remember it being like this when he was at
home - but it was never as wet as it has been recently when he was at
home. Another son in Leeds (Chapel Allerton) has had an overgrown garden
with a huge pond and a lot of snails and slugs for years - but I suspect
he wouldn't even notice if there were differences in population. The
daughter in France probably eats them if she has them.

I saw absolutely no snails or slugs in April but we had no rain at all in
that month and I expect they stayed safely underground.

I doubt that you had as much rain in Berkshire in 1972 as we've had here
in the last few weeks, it's been unseasonal. Snails and slugs thrive under
damp conditions and become apparent, just because they're not seen doesn't
mean that they're not there.


Thank you, Mary, for your interesting reply.

Here in Leeds 17 (a couple of hundred metres to the West of the A61
Harrogate Road, and the same distance North of the A6210 Ring Road), the
problem is not necessarily directly related to the recent prolonged wet
weather. Of course, I take it for granted that we will always see more
snails on a wet night. For the last six years, I have seen large numbers of
snails on any wet night that God has sent. Summer 2006 was much drier than
average, yet we still saw enormous numbers of snails that would appear on
the few wet evenings that we did have. As I said in my original posting, I
hardly ever saw a snail in the first 27 years I lived here, even on a wet
summer evening. Now, and for the past few years, their numbers have become
spectacular.

I am fascinated by your low-key reaction : -- "I've lived in the same house
in Leeds for the last 43 years. In the first few years I saw a lot of snails
but few slugs. I haven't noticed any difference in the small variations
since then.". Quite different from my own experience, which is spectacular,
yet we live at most only a few miles apart.

Richard Chambers Leeds UK.