Gardeners urged to sprinkle coffee in garden this November

Gardeners are being urged to sprinkle coffee granules in their garden this month.

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Gardeners up and down the UK are being urged to take action in November - using coffee granules. After a very disappointing summer with lots of rain, gardeners are now facing another wet yet so far, quite mild winter, the perfect conditons for slugs and snails to thrive. The pesky molluscs breed and lay eggs over the winter, meaning they'll all come back in explosive numbers again when you're trying to grow your prized fruit, veg and flowers in 2025.

The hungry molluscs will stop at nearly nothing to strip your garden of everything you lovingly planted, chewing through strawberries, raspberries, tomato plants, potato foliage and every type of flower in their quest to satisfy their seemingly unending hunger. Slug and snail populations have been much higher than normal this summer, boosted by the gloomy and wet weather, but their numbers will be even worse in the wet months. That's because as the weather turns wetter and the nights draw longer, slugs and snails will have optimum conditions to spread through your garden and what's worse, lay their eggs for next year.



But gardeners are sharing a top tip which can help control and repel slug populations before that happens - instant coffee. Cheap coffee grounds aren't just a way to perk up your morning routine, but they can also hand everything growing in your garden a boost too. Caffeine is toxic to slugs and snails and some garden experts therefore swear by it as a method of pest control.

Word of warning, though, coffee is a very painful method for slugs to die, worse than salt, so don't apply coffee grounds directly to any slugs or snails (stomping on them would be much quicker and less cruel). Instead just sprinkle the coffee grounds onto soil and around raised beds or pots during dry, clear weather, and then when it does rain, the slugs won't cross the coffee, thereby protecting your precious flowers and crops. In studies, coffee grounds were found to reduce slug and snail numbers by between 50 and 90 percent.

The coffee won't have any harmful effects on your plants either, in fact some studies have found that caffeine actually boosts plant growth. Gardening blog Tea and Coffee says: "Coffee grounds contain a chemical called alkaloid, which is poisonous to slugs. When slugs ingest coffee grounds, they suffer from severe dehydration and eventually die.

For these reasons, slugs will avoid areas where coffee grounds have been sprinkled. While coffee grounds may not be the most effective way to keep slugs out of your garden, they can be a helpful tool in deterring these pests.".