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Pastimes : Gardening and Especially Tomato Growing -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: AugustWest who wrote (1111)5/14/2001 9:20:39 AM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 3495
 
Re: grubs - yesterday bought a can of milky spore, a bacillus that kills Japanese beetle grubs but is harmless to man, animals, birds, fish, or other insects. I will try to talk the neighbors into doing their lawns, too. Not what I'd call "cheap" but it lasts for at least 10 years.

biconet.com



To: AugustWest who wrote (1111)5/14/2001 12:47:12 PM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3495
 
How about controling the pest, not sure if they're bores or grubs, that
destroy my squash plants every year?



To: AugustWest who wrote (1111)12/13/2001 1:18:54 AM
From: SIer formerly known as Joe B.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3495
 
A Robot That Thrives on Slugs
Wednesday December 12 11:37 AM ET
By Michelle Green
news.yahoo.com

LONDON (Reuters) - For centuries the humble slug has eaten its way through the world's vegetable patches, frustrating farmers and gardeners alike, but thanks to British scientists the great plant muncher is about to be munched.

Scientists at Britain's University of West England have developed the ``SlugBot,'' a prototype robot capable of hunting down more than 100 slugs an hour.

It operates after dark when slugs are most active and uses their rotting bodies to generate the electricity it needs to power itself.

The SlugBot is the brainchild of engineers at the university's Intelligent Autonomous Systems Laboratory who wanted to build the world's first fully autonomous robot.

``Slugs were chosen because they are a major pest, are reasonably plentiful, have no hard shell of skeleton, and are reasonably large,'' Dr. Ian Kelly, SlugBot's creator, said in a statement.

The 2-foot-high machine uses an image sensor that beams out red light to pinpoint the slugs, which emit a different infra-red wavelength from worms and snails.

It then uses a carbon fiber arm with a three-fingered claw grabber to pick up the slugs and store them in a tank.

After a hard night of slug busting, the robot returns home and unloads its victims into a fermentation tank. While the SlugBot recharges, the fermentation tank turns the slug sludge into electricity.

But the robot, voted one of the best inventions of the year by Time magazine, has attracted some criticism.

One Time reader called the invention ``reckless'' in a letter to the magazine. ``To create robots that devour flesh is to step over a line that we would be insane to cross,'' he said.

Gardeners were more welcoming. Adam Pasco, editor of the BBC Gardener's World magazine, told the Daily Mail: ``Anything that would prove a fool-proof method of destroying slugs would be fantastic.''

A spokeswoman for the university told Reuters on Wednesday there were no plans to release the SlugBot on the commercial market. ``It was a proof of concept machine only,'' she said.

The news will disappoint Britain's farmers who spend an average 20 million pounds a year trying to eradicate the slimy creatures.