You really can't. After you become an avid gardener with a little experience you will learn to live with them. A good majority of the bugs are beneficial and you need them in your garden. As for the destructive bugs, most of them don't do enough harm to ruin your crop. Every now and then you might get an infestation and you will need to accept your losses because I think it's better not to use pesticides on a veggie garden.
Now is a good time to put your tomato plants in the ground. Little bothers them with exception of the cut worm. You can protect your tomato with a collar made out of a plastic plant container. Just cut the bottom half off and put it over your tomato and push it about an inch into the soil.
As for the lettuce and strawberries, my only suggestion is to watch out for slugs. I don't know were you are but where I am is way to hot for lettus now. However, when I grow lettus not much bothers it and as far as my strawberries, I have worse trouble with bunnies.
Good Luck
2007-06-12 11:04:36
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answer #1
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answered by Sptfyr 7
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Bugs and creepy crawlies are part of the garden. Your kids will enjoy discovering them. If however you don't want to lose ALL your little plants then wait until they are quite big so that the beasties don't bite through them with one chomp.
I am going to try planting out a couple of courgette plants soon. To protect them I have collected plastic lemonade bottles. Cut off the top and the bottom and stick them in the soil around the newly planted veggies. Check regularly for adventurous slugs and snails though - they can climb well but not very fast!
2007-06-12 11:13:14
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answer #2
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answered by Funky Duncy 2
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beer pot for the slugs, broken egg shells or orange peel for the cats, plant marigolds to stop the whitefly, and nasturnums (both of which can be used in salads ) as well, regular hoeing will defeat most weeds . A lot of bugs are actually quite good for the garden. If you tie a bundle of reeds or bamboo canes together you can make a home for ladybirds which are great for eating greenfly. There are a lot of natural methods you can use but you will never eradicate all the bugs and as I have said some are very good for the garden.
2007-06-12 11:13:14
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answer #3
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answered by bluegirl 3
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Forget the beer for the snails and slugs. If you want something that is natural, that will help your soil, as well as get rid of the slugs and snails. Use brewed coffee once a month or put your coffee grounds around the base of the plant- then water. Slugs and snails hate caffeine. They will turn around once they get a taste of the soil.
The coffee grounds also makes great fertilizer.
2007-06-12 11:29:47
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answer #4
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answered by corsinofour 2
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Encourage the beneficial animals into your garden.
By discouraging cats and leaving some hedges unkept robins, blackbirds and thrushes will nest, these eat slugs and snails.
Leave a pile of logs, this will attract slow worms which eat slugs.
Establish a pond, byut no fish, frogs will eat slugs.
Have fun
2007-06-12 19:56:07
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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For some bugs plant some herbs and also Marigold in between your veggies.
What I have done I put a shallow dish out there with beer in it suppose to keep bugs away.
Also purchase some garlic gloves in the local grocery. Than seperate them and plug them and spread them out. I done that too whereever I have plants even if they are in containers.
2007-06-12 11:38:52
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answer #6
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answered by angelikabertrand64 5
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Once your garden has started, add some "good" garden bugs to prey upon the pests.
These can be ordered by catalog, over the internet or some nurseries carry them.
I order from these guys; http://www.gardensalive.com
They've been great and have a large selection of products that are non-toxic and lots of the good bugs to sell.
2007-06-12 11:30:55
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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If by utilizing "neat" cow manure you propose "clean" cow manure, that's no longer cautioned. clean manure can incorporate pathogens. it is likewise too centred and can burn your plant life with too lots fertilizing action. i'm getting "previous" dried steer manure from a buddy's pasture. as quickly as the patties are sufficiently dried and cured (approximately 6 months in the pasture), you may disintegrate them into airborne dirt and dust and use them as fertilizer. If the cow manure is bought in luggage, that's already cured and sterilized, so that's risk-free. I compost clean steer manure by utilizing digging a great hollow and including leaves, grass clippings, manure and water and masking the hollow up. next spring, turn the soil over and you have wealthy black compost to function on your backyard. sure, nonsterile steer manure in many cases has grass and weed seeds in it. i'm getting some very exciting weeds in my backyard as a consequence, yet I in basic terms pull them up!
2016-10-09 02:01:39
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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The best way to gaurd against slugs and snails is to put a saucer of beer near the base of the plants.
They LOVE beer and drown.
2007-06-12 11:03:33
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answer #9
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answered by Tray B 4
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DE, or diatomatious earth(sp?) is great! It keeps the bugs away, but not the worms..Does not harm them at all.. Just sprinkle...Call your feed centers and someone should have it. It's way too expensive to order online and have to pay for shipping.
Also, not the stuff for pools...Food grade..different stuff!
2007-06-12 11:34:55
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answer #10
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answered by Momto8gr8 6
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