Chris Packham: learning to love slugs will help garden wildlife bloom | Environment
The naturalist and broadcaster Chris Packham has advised the nation to encourage the ecosystem of their gardens by ceasing to kill slugs.
Extolling the virtues of tolerance, Packham said âdraconian choicesâ like âI donât want slugs and snails to eat my plantsâ puts the gardener at risk of losing other wildlife such as hedgehogs, slowworms and song thrushes.
âThatâs a tragic loss to the garden,â the BBC Springwatch presenter told the Radio Times magazine. âThe song of the thrush is the closest youâre going to get to a nightingale in the 21st-century British garden.
âThe slugâs been offered a free banquet. You have to expect it to eat it. If youâre planting a row of lettuce, youâre planting a free supermarket for molluscs. If you turned up at Sainsburyâs and they said: âEverything today is freeâ, youâd fill your basket, wouldnât you?
âThatâs what humans would do. So put yourself in the mind of the slug. You have to find a degree of tolerance, find ways of managing slugs without killing them.â
Packham also suggests gardeners cut a hole in their fence to let hedgehogs walk through safely and put a bell on their catâs collar to warn wildlife the cat is on the prowl.
Recently, Packham was cleared of two counts of assault in Malta after confronting hunters who had trapped wild birds.
A Maltese magistrate dismissed the case against him after he produced video evidence in court that showed he was jostled by a hunter while filming an interview about the illegal slaughter of birds on the island.
Speaking to the Guardian at the time, Packham said he was not going to press charges against the police or the hunter âbecause weâve got better things to be doing. At the moment there are a lot of embarrassed police officers and hunters.â
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