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![]() | 70 Most Recent Posts |
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| Hi, I dont really know about wormtea as havent used it yet (havent found a supplier in Europe yet...) I know beer works...but as you mentioned i dont think the orchid would appreciate it ! and i dont think you can leave it in the beer long enough to drown them! If you are repotting you could try and take off all the medium and rincing the plant under a tap to "wash the slugs" away? you could also then leave the plants roots submerged in just water for ..? 1/2 hour or more to "drown" the remaining snails a - and/or depending on pot size put beer into a bottle top -whether metal or plastic depending on "space" you have in pot... hope this helps, I have not had the problem yet... - Good Luck !! I would be interested to know the outcome! |
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| Worm tea will not do any more for this than water, alone. Save the worm tea for what's it meant for. Invite those critters over for a beer. I've read over and over here that it will do the job. Do a search on beer bait. It's all over the forum. |
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| The greatest damage I ever had, worse than the Fusarium, was from bush snails (the tiny ones) and my misguided attempts to get rid of them. They are very damaging to plants in a course mix like bark. They live in the bark, eating off the green root tips. I would unpot a Catt to find that the root system looked like a Cholla cactus. The roots had grown only a short distance, been stopped by the loss of a tip, then sprouted side roots , which also only grew a short distance, and this was repeated over and over again, leaving this Cholla looking like root system. When you have several hundred plants, soaking in water for a few hours is not practical. I won't bother with the story how in my failed attempt to get rid of them, I transfered virus to nearly my entire collection. So, my solution back then was to go to a closed mix, peat and vermiculite (vermiculite is now deadly to orchids since it started coming in from South Africa), and now days, peat and perlite. I just ignore the little buggers when they come in on a new plant now, cause I know they will soon be dead for lack of a habitat. For situations where you need a large scale treatment for snails and slugs, I have had great success with diatomaceous earth. Some claim that the stuff from a pool supply doesn't work, but it worked great for me, where the stuff from a feed store seemed to silky to be abrasive enough. I have a little hand pump flour sifter I use to spread it around the GH every 2 or 3 months. MUST wear a dust mask, or you could get something similar to silicosis. Once down, it is safe for people and pets. Beer is useful if the bowl is large enough to keep the really big slugs from stretching their way out and just over the lip, where they can then use their shape to escape. Saw one do this, then went to a bigger bowl. It is a slow process cleaning up a greenhouse with bowls of beer all over. The diatomaceous earth wiped them out in 1 day.
__________________ Cynthia Prescott Orchid Society |
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| I was going to recommend the same thing - diatomaceous earth. I have used the pool store variety as well, simply because we have it around anyway, and it worked great. It's the only thing I will put in my backyard because of my dogs and a few neighbor cats and raccoons. It is actually little bitty fossils that act like glass to snails and slugs; no chemicals involved. Cheap too!! Cynthia - I didn't know that about vermiculite, altho I don't use it currently. Do you think it would be worth it's own warning/posting???
__________________ "Women who obey seldom make history." |
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| Here's an interesting article about this pest (University of Hawaii) The orchid snail as a pest of orchids in Hawaii |
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| get a solution of epsom salts and water. the salts(which aren't harmful, but rather beneficial to plants) will dry up the snails. it may not work with epsom salt, but i figure that it would work just as well with it than sodium, which could damage the roots and potting medium. if that doesn't work, set out a tub of beer about an inch deep and the slugs/snails will crawl into it and drown. |
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| I am of the understanding that metaldehyde does not kill snails/slugs, but knocks them out to be killed by the sun when it comes up. Hardly very effective when the snails live inside the pot. I tried to kills the snails by soaking the plants in metaldehyde liquid. It didn't work, just spread virus thru the plants.
__________________ Cynthia Prescott Orchid Society |
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I have had a lot of problems with snails and slugs and have found a successful method of eliminating these pests. These tiny snails are probably Zonitoides arboreus, or orchid snails. Are they brownish and a bit bigger than a pin head? I read this great article that says: "In preliminary experiments, conducted in a research greenhouse in Hilo, two-striped slugs (Veronicella cubensis) were allowed to bury themselves in soil in pots, then the soil was wetted with a 2% solution of caffeine in water. After 3½ hours only 25% of the slugs remained in the soil, and by 2 days all of the slugs were gone, with 92% dead. When slugs were fed 2% caffeine-treated cabbage leaves, 39% less was consumed over a 4 day period. And when slugs had a choice of treated or untreated leaves, consumption of the treated leaves was reduced by 77% (1% treatment) or 64% (2% treatment). Total cabbage consumption was reduced by 14 and 28%, respectively, indicating caffeine significantly reduces feeding. Then greenhouse studies were conducted in Hilo, HA, applying caffeine solution sprays to snail-infested coir (coconut husk-chip medium in which potted orchids are grown). One and 2% solutions killed 60 and 95%, respectively, of the snails in the coir. And the 2% solution was even more effective in reducing the presence of snails than the commercial standard for orchid-snail treatment. After 30 days, caffeine-treated coir had only 5 snails, while coir treated with a standard dose of commercial metaldehyde had 35 snails and the water control 43 snails. The researchers do not know how caffeine kills slugs and snails. But tests showed topically applied 2% caffeine solutions reduced orchid snail heart contractions, and all died after 4 days. Caffeine's high solubility in water — a key component of molluscs' locomotor mucus — could make slugs and snails more susceptible to contact poisoning from caffeine than other animals such as arthropods." I have watered my orchids with cups of strong coffee for two or three days, then took a break (if some snails hatched from their eggs), and repeated the procedure after a week or so. After treatment I repotted the plant just in case it didn't like coffee as much as we do |
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| The person who has done the most research on slugs and snails on orchids in Hawaii is Dr. Robert (Robbie) Hollingsworth. He's a plant biologist with the USDA, Agricultural Research Service. Contact him at rhollingsworth at pbarc dot ars dot usda dot gov. He's now working on other things but is still probably the most knowledgeable about the control of snail/slugs. |
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Here it is: Caffeine Stops Slugs |