Banning the use of snares would damage our rural environment and allow pests such as foxes and rabbits to destroy vegetation and protected b...
Case Studies
Knowing how to prevent and treat pest problems is fundamental to maximizing the rewards you can reap from your gardening efforts. When faced with a pest problem, gardeners – new ones in particular – often reach for toxic insecticides.
It's true that many poisons sold in garden centers will kill any, and often all, insects in your garden. But spraying chemicals is rarely the best strategy. Many pesticides are hazardous to humans and wildlife, and most will kill beneficial insects right along with the pests you're targeting.
Before you march into your garden armed for an insect Armageddon, answer three important questions:
It's important to understand that most garden pests are only capable of damaging a narrow range of closely related plants. For example, little black flea beetles may make holes in potato leaves in spring, then hop to tomatoes or eggplant in summer, but they won't veer far from plants that are members of the nightshade family. In similar fashion, the squash bugs that invade your pumpkin patch cannot digest juices sucked from lettuce or broccoli.
A few pests do have broad feeding ranges (Japanese beetles eat the leaves and flowers of more than 200 plants, and some grasshopper species have equally varied tastes), but for the most part, garden pests require the presence of specific host plants – that's where you can target your efforts.
SDA Pest Control, "Long Acre",
Bluntisham Road,
Needingworth,
St. Ives,
Cambridgeshire
01480 465684