Garden Pests - the answers
Tips and Tricks in Dealing with Garden Pests
I find that one of the most frustrating things that can happen when I'm about to check on the plants and
vegetables in my garden is to find they're infested with slugs.
It’s just a routine walk to make sure that your garden is thriving, but you end up finding holes in all of your
plants that looked fine only hours before.
While I try to understand that all must live, some of these plant-destroying garden pests are a nuisance.
Some of the main garden pests are slugs, worms, caterpillars, birds, snails, and the occasional gopher.
You can try as hard as you like but you'll never wipe out these garden pests entirely but with all your effort
in the garden you have to do something about the bugs in the garden.
Let them live but let them eat something you don't want or tell them to go next door. Some of them do a great
job for you but you don't want to have too many in your garden.
Knowing that they can live under the soil, in old weeds or piles of leaves, or in a number of other places you
can arrange things in the garden help keep insects away from those parts of your garden.
Remove old leaves, weeds, or any other decaying matter that insects and diseases could be living in from your
garden. Also, regularly turn over your garden soil and break apart any clumps so that you can eliminate the living
spaces any insects that might be hiding underground. 
If you're not fussed about killing them you could use dormant spray, which is used to keep destructive insects
and diseases under control.
It is best that you use dormant spray when your plants are dormant, usually around February or early March. I have
used dormant spray many times on our garden and it has worked wonders on keeping insects out. But as I learned
from experience, dormant spray is only effective if you follow the correct instructions.
When I first decided to use some on our garden, I just dumped it everywhere in hopes of killing everything
harmful. Unfortunately I ended up killing my entire garden along with my neighbours. Some insects can be beneficial
to your garden though, so be sure to find out which insects help your garden.
Another garden pests problem I've had besides insects has been birds. To avoid
them being a nuisance the solution that I've come up with is to put a bird feeder in my garden. Instead of costing
me time and money by eating our garden, the birds eat at the bird feeder.
In the long run it’ll save you money. Not only can a bird feeder help keep birds away from your garden, but they
can also be a new part of your garden decoration. Although not completely eliminating my bird problem, my bird
feeder has made the problem smaller. Getting a dog has also helped.
If you start seeing mounds of dirt around your garden, and your plants keep unexplainably dying, you can assume
that you have a garden pests gopher problem. Thankfully, this is one of the few garden pests that
I haven't had. However my friend has struggled with a tremendous gopher infestation, so I decided to research nore
about these Gophers that are rodents and are five to fourteen inches long.
Their fur can be black, light brown, or white, and they have small tails. One method of getting rid of these
root-eating pests is to set traps. The key to successfully capturing a gopher using a trap is to successfully
locate the gopher's tunnels and set the trap correctly. Another way to get rid of them is to use smoke bombs, which
you place into the tunnel and the smoke spreads through out it and hopefully reaches the gopher.
If you suspect that your gardens are being pillaged by any of the garden pests I mentioned, I encourage you to
try your hardest to eliminate the problem as soon as possible. The longer you let the species stay, the more
established it will become.
Editor
Peter Charalambos
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