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Home » Households urged to pour 39p drink onto gardens immediately to repel slugs
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Households urged to pour 39p drink onto gardens immediately to repel slugs

By staff28 June 2025No Comments7 Mins Read

Fill up a saucer with the slimy pests’ favourite drink each night and watch them leave your precious plants and vegetables alone, says expert Diarmuid Gavin

A slug on a leaf
Slugs and snails will attack lush new growth, decimating beds and borders, destroying cabbages and hostas(Image: Getty Images/500px)

Even with this dry weather pests are still a menace in our garden, munching their way through your pride and joys. Slugs and snails are everywhere, attacking all the new lush growth, decimating beds and borders, destroying cabbages and hostas, driving already challenged gardeners to distraction.

But they are living things and if you, like me, think they have a right to exist, one approach is to deter them without annihilating them. Keep an eye out for slugs and snails who may tuck into your flowers and leafy vegetables. If you’re not scared of handling the critters, just pluck them off after dark with the aid of a torch.

If you want the slugs to die happy, well, try a beer trap or even just sinking a saucer of beer into the ground near the plants which need protecting. A shallow saucer of beer nightly beside your flowers is a good way of controlling them.

They will become slightly merry before drowning in the alcohol, but you will have to top up regularly and also protect from over dilution by the rain. Here are some other tasks to tick off the to-do list this month….

Jobs to do in the garden this week

  • Keep roses well watered in warm weather and regularly check pots for watering.
  • Peat-based compost can dry out, so it may need a complete dunking in a bucket of water until all the air bubbles are gone from soil.

READ MORE: Homes with hanging baskets urged to repeat crucial 60 second task daily

  • Warm weather can lead to an increase in algae and duckweed in your pond, so fish it out with a small fishing net or twirl it around a cane. Barley straw in the pond can help keep the problem at bay or if you can’t get hold of any there are liquid products available that contain an extract of it which will do the same job.
  • Keep your bird bath topped up for the birds.
  • Divide irises after flowering – you only need do this process every few years but it will help to put new life into old stock.

After hosting winter displays and spring bulbs, now’s the time for summer colour in my pots. That’s been my job this week and I like using terracotta pots because they complement most types of planting.

They can dry out quickly so require a commitment to keeping them well watered throughout the warmer months. I’ve emptied the old compost around the garden beds and I am using a good-quality multi-purpose compost that will support my choice of plants.

This, combined with fortnightly liquid feeding and deadheading, should ensure lots of flowers to enjoy over the next few months. As we are well past any fear of frost, there’s plenty of plants that will thrive now. Tender bedding plants can be used and you may have been growing your own from seed which might be pot ready now.

Diarmuid Gavin in his garden with his pots
Diarmuid has spent the week putting summer colour in his favourite terracotta pots

It is easy to be seduced by the trays of brightly coloured flowers for sale but in general it’s a good idea to buy plants that have plenty of buds yet to blossom. I’ve chosen a mix of perennial and annuals, some old favourites and some new ones to try out.

Bulbine ‘Avera Sunset Orange’ is a newbie. A perennial, it’s also known as the burnt jelly plant as its succulent leaves have skin-healing properties, a bit like aloe vera. It has fleshy linear leaves and exotic-looking orange and yellow flowers. Hailing from South Africa, it can only manage outdoors here in the summer unless you are in the Scilly Isles or somewhere similar.

It’s a good plant for a balcony and then can be taken indoors over winter. Erigeron karvinskianus is an old reliable and one that I think looks great with its relaxed habit, the daisy flowers tumbling down the side of pots.

Although it comes from Mexico, it’s remarkably happy in our climate. It’s great as an edging plant, tucked into cracks in paving or walls or simply as part of a mixed border and will grow in sun or partial shade in well-drained soil.

Cerinthe purpurascens, also known as honeywort
Cerinthe purpurascens, also known as honeywort, is a very easy-to-grow annual – and a magnet for bees and butterflies(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Cerinthe purpurascens is a very easy-to-grow annual. Also known as honeywort, its pretty purple bell-shaped flowers are a magnet for bees and butterflies. These contrast beautifully with the silvery green oval leaves too. Cosmos is also a superb half hardy annual – I love the daisy-like flowers that usually come in white or pink but are also available in warmer yellows and oranges.

I’ve a slightly complex relationship with hostas. Any plant that causes gardeners anxiety due to a creature nibbling on them, using chemical pesticides to kill them off, possibly isn’t right for that gardener’s plot.

The slugs that feed on them make delicious food for our garden birds. And why do we want to poison any creature in our gardens? It’s not really part of our nurturing nature is it? But there are some hostas that have a reputation for being slug resistant.

I’m using a variety called ‘Blue Umbrellas’, which is one of the largest of the species and has giant blue-green heart shaped leaves. It should be the crowning glory of the new potted garden.

Plant of the week: Delphinium ‘Faust’

Delphinium ‘Faust’
Delphinium ‘Faust’, which has rich blue double flowers and a dark eye, grows up to 6ft(Image: Compulsory Credit: GAP Photos/Dave Zubraski)

It’s hard to compete with the glamour of delphiniums in full bloom, their stately stems covered in flowers. ‘Faust’ is a fine cultivar with an RHS Award of Garden Merit. It has rich blue double flowers with a dark eye and can grow to a height of 5-6ft. For best results, grow in well-drained soil and full sunshine.

Give them adequate space as they don’t like to be crowded and a sheltered spot is best. They make gorgeous cut flowers and provide vertical interest in the borders, flowering through the summer. Cut back faded spikes and you may get a second flush of flowers. For super blooms, thin shoots when young to leave just two or three spikes.

Why your roses aren’t growing well in pots

A reader wrote in to ask why his roses aren’t doing well in pots. They’re the right size and he followed the label instructions. I don’t blame him for being baffled. Roses can grow very well in pots provided the conditions are right. In warm and windy weather pots can dry out fast so consistent watering is essential.

However, they don’t like being waterlogged as the roots can rot, so good drainage is important – pots must have drainage holes. Roses are hungry feeders and will benefit from a high potassium feed every two weeks in the growing season. Pot compost can become exhausted so top with fresh compost every year. With consistent moisture, good drainage, and feeding, your roses should bounce back.

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