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| ntpw:natural_pest_and_weed_control [2026/05/13 15:07] – Otto Hague | ntpw:natural_pest_and_weed_control [2026/06/07 15:36] (current) – [Controlling pests] Otto Hague | ||
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| ==== Controlling pests ==== | ==== Controlling pests ==== | ||
| - | First, make sure you are practising good [soil management](/ | + | First, make sure you are practising good [soil management](/ |
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| + | Secondly, make a habit of walking your garden, fields, orchards, or other places you maintain. Take a good look at what is showing up, where, and when. Pests have different preferences and life cycles, and to most effectively prevent or clean up a pest problem you need to target them at their weakest. Their life cycles will also vary based on weather: most insects mature faster if it's warmer than usual. | ||
| === Encouraging pest predators === | === Encouraging pest predators === | ||
| Birds eat aphids, caterpillars and other insect pests, so one of the best things that you can do to reduce pests in your garden is to invite more birds into it. You can do that by giving birds places to live in your garden, and bribing them to visit and stay by providing food. You can buy or make bird boxes. Designs vary depending on which type of bird you want, e.g. robin boxes have a letter-box shaped slot at the front, and blue-tit boxes have a small hole for an entrance. You can easily find instructions and plans for bird boxes online. Now, think about your bird menu - you could plant trees and bushes with berries that attract birds, such as hawthorn and rose hips, or flowers that produce seeds that birds enjoy, such as sunflowers, zinnias, cornflowers and marigolds. Be careful though not to attract birds towards the berries that you want to harvest, such as your soft fruit area – best to attract the birds towards the vegetable beds and fruit trees. | Birds eat aphids, caterpillars and other insect pests, so one of the best things that you can do to reduce pests in your garden is to invite more birds into it. You can do that by giving birds places to live in your garden, and bribing them to visit and stay by providing food. You can buy or make bird boxes. Designs vary depending on which type of bird you want, e.g. robin boxes have a letter-box shaped slot at the front, and blue-tit boxes have a small hole for an entrance. You can easily find instructions and plans for bird boxes online. Now, think about your bird menu - you could plant trees and bushes with berries that attract birds, such as hawthorn and rose hips, or flowers that produce seeds that birds enjoy, such as sunflowers, zinnias, cornflowers and marigolds. Be careful though not to attract birds towards the berries that you want to harvest, such as your soft fruit area – best to attract the birds towards the vegetable beds and fruit trees. | ||
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| + | If birds end up becoming a problem, you can put up perches or nest boxes suitable for raptors like buzzards. Raptors will take care of birds and rodents, and make those that survive much less bold. | ||
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| Frogs and toads eat lots of slugs, so it's a great idea to have a wildlife pond in or near your food-growing area. The pond doesn' | Frogs and toads eat lots of slugs, so it's a great idea to have a wildlife pond in or near your food-growing area. The pond doesn' | ||
| - | You can also reduce pests in your garden by encouraging beneficial insects. Almost everyone knows that ladybirds eat huge quantities of aphids (especially at the larval stage – see photo). Lacewings also eat aphids and are to be encouraged. There are two main things you can do to encourage beneficial insects: firstly, never use pesticides, as pesticides wipe out your beneficial insect population (i.e. the opposite of encouraging them). Since pests such as aphids reproduce faster than beneficial insects, all you do is make the problem worse and end up in a vicious spiral of ever-increasing pesticide use. Nasty! Secondly, you can make homes for your beneficial insects, by making a bug hotel. These can be made really easily and cheaply, for example just by cutting the end off a plastic bottle and filling it with dry hollow stems and sticks, or rolled up corrugated cardboard, then fixing it to a sheltered wall or fence. More information [here](https:// | + | You can also reduce pests in your garden by encouraging beneficial insects. Almost everyone knows that ladybirds eat huge quantities of aphids (especially at the larval stage – see photo). Lacewings also eat aphids and are to be encouraged. There are two main things you can do to encourage beneficial insects: firstly, never use pesticides, as pesticides wipe out your beneficial insect population (i.e. the opposite of encouraging them). Since pests such as aphids reproduce faster than beneficial insects, all you do is make the problem worse and end up in a vicious spiral of ever-increasing pesticide use. Nasty! |
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| + | Secondly, you can make homes for your beneficial insects, by making a bug hotel. These can be made really easily and cheaply, for example just by cutting the end off a plastic bottle and filling it with dry hollow stems and sticks, or rolled up corrugated cardboard, then fixing it to a sheltered wall or fence. More information [here](https:// | ||
| Another great tip to get lacewings breeding – leave a stack of the egg-holding parts of egg boxes on a shelf in your greenhouse or shed over the winter. Lacewings just love the spaces between the different layers, and in spring it will be full of new lacewings hatching out (leave it undisturbed from late summer until late spring). | Another great tip to get lacewings breeding – leave a stack of the egg-holding parts of egg boxes on a shelf in your greenhouse or shed over the winter. Lacewings just love the spaces between the different layers, and in spring it will be full of new lacewings hatching out (leave it undisturbed from late summer until late spring). | ||
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| In recent years it has become possible to buy insects such as ladybirds by mail order. This might be worth doing if you have plenty of money, a large greenhouse, a major aphid problem, and no ladybirds - but it's an expensive solution and the ladybirds might fly off elsewhere! You'll also often see adverts (if you read gardening magazines) for mail-order nematodes - tiny parasitic worms, less than 1mm long, which get into slugs and kill and eat them from the inside (yuk). These are watered into the soil starting in early spring, and will control slugs for about 6 weeks, after which you might need to buy another pack - see [nemaslug.co.uk](http:// | In recent years it has become possible to buy insects such as ladybirds by mail order. This might be worth doing if you have plenty of money, a large greenhouse, a major aphid problem, and no ladybirds - but it's an expensive solution and the ladybirds might fly off elsewhere! You'll also often see adverts (if you read gardening magazines) for mail-order nematodes - tiny parasitic worms, less than 1mm long, which get into slugs and kill and eat them from the inside (yuk). These are watered into the soil starting in early spring, and will control slugs for about 6 weeks, after which you might need to buy another pack - see [nemaslug.co.uk](http:// | ||
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| + | If you're having a problem with a particular pest (it is super important to know what pests you're dealing with; spend time in your garden!) you can try and attract parasitoid wasps. These tiny wasps are super specialists, | ||
| === Trapping === | === Trapping === | ||
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| You can also buy pheromone traps which you can hang in fruit trees to control pests, but this is usually only done by commercial fruit growers, who might for example use a pheremone trap to catch male codling moths in apple trees to reduce the number of maggoty apples in their crop. There are also sticky 'fly paper' traps which you can hang in plants in greenhouses to catch aphids. If you want to try these, be sure to only buy traps which don't contain an insecticide. | You can also buy pheromone traps which you can hang in fruit trees to control pests, but this is usually only done by commercial fruit growers, who might for example use a pheremone trap to catch male codling moths in apple trees to reduce the number of maggoty apples in their crop. There are also sticky 'fly paper' traps which you can hang in plants in greenhouses to catch aphids. If you want to try these, be sure to only buy traps which don't contain an insecticide. | ||
| - | Traps don't have to be lethal: you can provide shelters that slugs and snails will love to hide under – half an orange or grapefruit skin that's been squeezed for juice, placed skin side upwards to make a sort of igloo, is an old favourite, but a plank of wood laid on the soil will also do. Every morning, lift the traps and (with gardening gloves on) pick up the slugs and dispose of them either humanely or not so humanely (see below). | + | Traps don't have to be lethal: you can provide shelters that slugs and snails will love to hide under – half an orange or grapefruit skin that's been squeezed for juice, placed skin side upwards to make a sort of igloo, is an old favourite, but a plank of wood laid on the soil will also do. Every morning, lift the traps and (with gardening gloves on) pick up the slugs and dispose of them either humanely or not so humanely (see below). Shelter can also be used against other pests, like weevils, which naturally gravitate towards narrow spaces. Simply supply a narrow space, let the weevils gather inside, and then remove the shelter. |
| Aphids love nettles, and so do ladybirds. One market garden grows nettles in pots, and places them near crops that they want to protect - newly arrived aphids then settle on the nettles and get eaten by the ladybirds. | Aphids love nettles, and so do ladybirds. One market garden grows nettles in pots, and places them near crops that they want to protect - newly arrived aphids then settle on the nettles and get eaten by the ladybirds. | ||
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| - | In daytime, you can inspect your crops for pests such as caterpillars and aphids (blackfly, greenfly, whitefly). Caterpillars can be picked off and taken away or killed; aphids really just have to be squished between your fingers (or sprayed with a dilute household soap solution, which kills them and is safe and environmentally friendly). Garlic and chilli pepper solutions may also be useful as a natural insecticide. | + | In daytime, you can inspect your crops for pests such as caterpillars and aphids (blackfly, greenfly, whitefly). Caterpillars can be picked off and taken away or killed; aphids really just have to be squished between your fingers (or sprayed with a dilute household soap solution, which kills them and is safe and environmentally friendly). Garlic and chilli pepper solutions may also be useful as a natural insecticide. You can also spread vegetable oil on the walls of barns, which can suffocate fly larvae and eggs. |
| === Barriers === | === Barriers === | ||
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| Some pests find the plants that they like to eat by sight – colour or shape – so it can be better to avoid the usual practice of planting blocks or rows of the same type of plant. Instead, plant mixtures of different types of plant in each area - growing ' | Some pests find the plants that they like to eat by sight – colour or shape – so it can be better to avoid the usual practice of planting blocks or rows of the same type of plant. Instead, plant mixtures of different types of plant in each area - growing ' | ||
| - | And finally, you can make a scarecrow or hang old CDs near to your baby brassicas to scare off pigeons. | + | And finally, you can make a scarecrow or hang old CDs near to your baby brassicas to scare off pigeons. Tools such as this need to be changed regularly, as bird can get used to them over time. |
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| + | === Cleanliness === | ||
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| + | Pest problems can be prevented or combated with good hygiene. A lot of insect pests need moist shelter that protects them from the extremes of heat and cold, and many require mud or manure. Keep water storage on impermeable surfaces so spillage doesn' | ||
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| + | Rodents require shelter, especially if there are predators in the area. Keeping groundcover short next to crops or young trees can discourage rodents, as they will have to cross an exposed area to get to your plants. During winter, you can pull back mulch from the base of young trees and other perennials. | ||
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| + | === Rotation === | ||
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| + | Rotating crops and livestock can prevent a pest problem. Often, pests and diseases will stay in the soil over the winter, so if you plant the same crop in the same field, the pests will stick around. If you plant something different (and not closely related), the pests will have nowhere to go and may die off. The same goes for livestock parasites, which often spread via infected manure being left on pasture. Don't put the same kind of livestock in the same pasture for at least a year if you're worried about parasites. | ||
| ==== Controlling weeds ==== | ==== Controlling weeds ==== | ||