Winter Weeds, Slugs and Snails Are Doing Great

Flowers and veggies lingered in my garden this year, encouraged by the mild autumn weather. Then came the holidays, followed by rain. So much for Fall garden tasks and cleanup chores. Between rainstorms in January, I walked around the garden amazed at how quickly the ground turned from golden fall leaves to a green carpet. As the summer garden died back, weeds took advantage of less competition and filled in the open spaces. They grew from seeds that blew in, were dropped by birds, or were stored in the soil “seed bank' from previous plants that went to seed – just waiting for the right conditions to germinate. Constantly moist soil and cool weather allow seedlings to get their roots established before the soil dries out.

Planters with weeds.

Those beds of weeds are often ignored until Spring weather urges us to get our summer garden started. By then, the weeds are lush and well-rooted. “Weeding” becomes an unpleasant, daunting task if we wait.

Since weeds rob plants of nutrients and provide habitat for unwanted pests, it is important to control them early while they are still small. Although pulling weeds seems like a no-brainer, there is a definite way to do it efficiently. Grab a knee pad, hand hoe, Hori-Hori or trowel, and a big bucket. Kneel at the open edge of a bed and work on the weeds closest to you. Gently pull the largest weeds, lifting the root with a Hori-Hori or trowel. Next, with your fingers, pinch the base of an individual plant and “pluck” the weed out. This loosens the soil around it. making the next plant easier to pull. Gently shake the soil off the roots back into the bed before putting the weed in your bucket. Now, give the cleared area a shallow scuffle with the hand hoe to dislodge small seedlings. Don't dig weeds with a spade or disturb the soil deeper than an inch. This is hard on the soil structure and brings more weed seeds to the surface. Don't get anxious. If you try to grab and pull large handfuls, it only breaks off the leafy tops, which soon regrow from the leftover roots. It's better to do a smaller area thoroughly. Finally, add a 1” layer of weed free compost to the cleared area. This prevents light from germinating new seedlings.

Pulling weeds will give you a chance to appreciate the abundance of slugs and snails as well! It always catches me off guard to see how early the eggs begin to hatch. These voracious tiny babies are everywhere I look. Weeds, as it turns out, are a perfect hiding place to avoid predators. Tucked under the flat rosette of Shepherd's Purse or in the axis of an Asparagus leaf, slugs can eat and grow and not be found. Removing the weeds will greatly reduce their hiding places, as will removing last season's straw mulch and keeping the grass short around the garden beds… But slimy things are persistent in coastal gardens.

The undersides of wilted summer foliage keep snails happy and dry until tastier foliage emerges. They do serve a function, of course. Slowly, they help the decomposition of plant material. Summer plants that have been left to rot give slugs and snails an easy dinner. As I clean the debris and cut back the plants, I have found tiny little snails by the hundreds this year. Cleaning the beds reduces snails, but it also redirects them to the fresh new growth of healthy plants. Although I would love to just leave them for natural predators, there aren't enough birds, snakes, opossums, or other critters to make a dent in this year's bumper crop of mollusks.

There are no sure-fire exterminators for slugs and snails in the home garden. Environmentally concerned gardeners use Iron Phosphate baits like Sluggo with some success. But even the heavy-duty snail baits- the ones that contain Metaldehyde or Carbaryl (that also harms worms, reptiles, birds and some mammals) - only work on the snails that come in contact with the chemical. Many of the small hatchlings emerge and head for a sheltered place above the ground. You'll find them hiding in the tender tops of plants, under the lips of flowerpots, or behind shrub foliage where their ‘foot' never touches the ground. In the cool, damp air of night, they glide from their perch to devour prized plants – which seem to be their favorites. Controlling them becomes a bit more problematic and requires a combination of approaches.

I hesitate to share that hunting slimy slugs and snails has become a bit of a questionably sane, definitely weird obsession for me. You won't find me excited by a dish of beer with a few drunken snails in it. Instead, I clean, prune, plot, bait, consider the possibility of becoming an Escargot farmer, and then become the Human Predator. (That's right -  it's my Super- Power. ) To tackle the problem, I put on the garb of a crazed gardener - a bright LED headlamp, rubber gloves, a container of soapy water - and head into the night garden to make my rounds. As I examine each plant, turning over leaves to check bothsides, I pluck my slow-moving prey and pop it into the container, where it sinks to its demise. It's not a pretty sight. But there are just SO many snails!

As the nights go by and the population dwindles, I marvel at the impact I can have on a single population of slugs and snails. Yes, that's right, “a single population” because there will be more eggs hatching. A single snail can lay 6 batches of eggs in a year with up to 80 eggs each. That's 480 eggs for every snail! It's never-ending. But I'm doing my part.

So, I encourage you to get a head start on the weeding and garden cleanup this year. Keep that cool fashion-statement headlamp handy, and just ignore the neighbors' comments about your new nighttime gardening chore. For what it's worth, I can vouch for your sanity.

 

For additional information about Integrated Pest Management (IPM), including weeds and mollusks, Check out the University of California website  https://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/menu.homegarden.html?src=302-www&fr=3723

For help identifying and controlling weeds, https://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/weeds_intro.html

For more on slugs and snails, https://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7427.html

 

All photos are courtesy of the author, Annie Sicotte, and are used with permission.