
Getting rid of ants
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- Tom Good
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- Cheezy
- A selfsufficientish Regular
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I'm a bit late on this one, but I once heard good ol' Bob Flowerdew give this advice, an it works.
Firstly the ants do harvest the greenfly/aphids etc for their honey dew. And yes if you kill one collony you get several more.
The trick is to entice the ants to something better. What you do is put a spoon of jam in a place near your infested plant. The ants now see this as "easy" food and go to it. But (and this is the clever bit) they then see the aphids as surplus "sweet" factories, and more as potential sources of food....so they attack and eat them!
Try it
Firstly the ants do harvest the greenfly/aphids etc for their honey dew. And yes if you kill one collony you get several more.
The trick is to entice the ants to something better. What you do is put a spoon of jam in a place near your infested plant. The ants now see this as "easy" food and go to it. But (and this is the clever bit) they then see the aphids as surplus "sweet" factories, and more as potential sources of food....so they attack and eat them!
Try it
It's not easy being Cheezy
So you know how great Salsify is as a veg, what about Cavero Nero,great leaves all through the winter , then in Spring sprouting broccolli like flowers! Takes up half as much room as broccolli
So you know how great Salsify is as a veg, what about Cavero Nero,great leaves all through the winter , then in Spring sprouting broccolli like flowers! Takes up half as much room as broccolli
- Andy Hamilton
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Brilliant I will try it.
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
- hedgewizard
- A selfsufficientish Regular
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Being on light sandy soil, I regularly have problems with ants farming aphids on my apples and broad beans. They are so good at it that unless you're quick you have dieback to deal with, but a good blob of vasilene or something similar around the base of the stem will give them something to think about. I've also had problems with seed-stealing and tunnelling under the beds to such an extent that roots are affected. The worst thing though are the red ants - I'm not allergic but they inject formic acid when they bite so it hurts a bit and then itches for ages - children are worst affected.
The upshot of all this is that I have zero tolerance for red ants in the garden*, and won't put up with any ants in the veg beds or polytunnel - otherwise I leave them to it.
I've not tried the semolina thing, but we have a resident rat family so it's not a goer for now. Repeated flooding forces them to up sticks, but only generally by a few feet so it's good for pot plants and borders, but not a lot else. Usually I dig up the nest if I can get to it, and sprinkle pyrethrum powder when I see eggs. If I can't do that then the borax trick works well to kill the entire nest. Borax is getting harder to find now but you can buy it ready-made as "Nippon liquid" in the UK. I've never found that new ants move into the same spot as an eradicated nest - although I can see how that might work in time!
Oh, and there's an ant-killing nematode biocontroller available from the usual sources, but it's expensive enough to be only practical for small gardens.
*not that they seem to care, the bastards
The upshot of all this is that I have zero tolerance for red ants in the garden*, and won't put up with any ants in the veg beds or polytunnel - otherwise I leave them to it.
I've not tried the semolina thing, but we have a resident rat family so it's not a goer for now. Repeated flooding forces them to up sticks, but only generally by a few feet so it's good for pot plants and borders, but not a lot else. Usually I dig up the nest if I can get to it, and sprinkle pyrethrum powder when I see eggs. If I can't do that then the borax trick works well to kill the entire nest. Borax is getting harder to find now but you can buy it ready-made as "Nippon liquid" in the UK. I've never found that new ants move into the same spot as an eradicated nest - although I can see how that might work in time!
Oh, and there's an ant-killing nematode biocontroller available from the usual sources, but it's expensive enough to be only practical for small gardens.
*not that they seem to care, the bastards