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| I used to use a sprinkler on my garden and my chickens didn't seem to tear it up. There was plenty of grass and weeds to occupy them. And they didn't like the water spraying them.
This year I went to drip gardening and had to completely change how I gardened to accommodate them. It took replacing delicate squash, cantelope, cucumber plants and just sitting and watching them to see what was going wrong this year. What compelled the chickens to tear my vegetables up. My garden is so easy now to weed as the only place weeds grow is just under the vegetables where the drip is. I have 30+ chickens that I free range during the summer, and really wanted them to help keep down the ear-wig problem I have in the garden. Plus the richer eggs :)
First I found that I had layed compost under the plants, the bugs were hiding underneath, so the plants were getting torn up while the chickens searched them out. Then I saw that the chickens found all the dry dirt between the plants a great place to dirt bathe.
After watching them, I pulled out any compost left under the plants (now I know to mix it with dirt and put it back under the plants at night) and I saw that I needed to protect the main stalks of young plants until they got bigger and spread out much more than I had previously. I had a couple rolls of the decorative border wire for flowers, so cut it into lengths that could be formed into little cages (like tomato cages) and put these around the small plants. The hens cannot fit through the wire, and the smaller chicks don't have enough room to scratch in them.
I scraped up a few spots in my 'walkway' between plants to make them appear very inviting for a dirt bath, and put an extra drip line to an area under a tree to promote worms to be there so i could turn it up for the chickens. I flip a few shovelfuls out, they scratch through it and fill the hole back in again. (daily ritual) For particularly troublesome spots with the chickens, I put down both a cage and then made another out of small chicken wire to keep them all out except their heads to get bugs.
The plants are starting to produce vegetables and the chickens happily stick their heads through the wire directly under the plants to eat the bugs. They can scratch around, or dirt bathe around the plants, and even look under the trailing leaves as the squash runs across the ground, but don't seem to be tearing the plants out now.
Next year I will probably have to make more adjustments as the chicks this year that I bought are giant buff cochins. The hens will weigh up to 8 pounds, and the roosters up to 11 pounds.
I really don't like to spray sevin on my garden for the earwigs, sowbugs and any other pest, but the insect problem here is HUGE. Even with all the chickens if you move a stone in the garden or yard earwigs pour out. I tried homemade bug spray first, and it didn't slow down the earwigs at all. If anyone knows of a way to keep earwigs out of your garden, I'd love to hear from you.
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Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by growinidaho 5 (My Page) on Thu, Jul 16, 09 at 21:10
| Hi, I am new to gardening so I am learning as I go. I tried some diatomaceous earth for a grasshopper problem. I have field/weed sod on 3 sides of my garden. I killed 50 baby grasshoppers in a couple of days so I sprinkled some DE around the outside of my garden. It seems to have helped alot. I only get a couple of big grasshoppers per day that fly in and out while I am in the garden. Plants look ok too. It might work for those earwigs...you could google it. I thought it might kill the good bugs so I only used it outside of the garden. Try sprinkling it directly on your earwigs. Its supposed to be safe for animals. Also don't get the kind for swimming pools. D&B has a 4lb. bag...forgot how much...but a whole lot cheaper than Zamzows. Hope this will help! |
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