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#1
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1at post, egg id needed,new to gardening
hi my wife and i have just started gardening.
i have been turning the soil, weeding and planting this week and we have both noticed that under the soil there seems to be yellow/orange eggs everywhere, they are about 3mm in diameter and when you squeeze them they are quite hard and they pop/snap and emit a white mucus. ay ideas, i have searched the net and cant find anything. you gardening experts can help me i know you can. thanks in advance for the relplies. paul |
#2
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On Mon, 28 Mar 2005 16:34:58 +0000, paul wrote: hi my wife and i have just started gardening. i have been turning the soil, weeding and planting this week and we have both noticed that under the soil there seems to be yellow/orange eggs everywhere, they are about 3mm in diameter and when you squeeze them they are quite hard and they pop/snap and emit a white mucus. ay ideas, i have searched the net and cant find anything. you gardening experts can help me i know you can. thanks in advance for the relplies. paul Sounds like slow release fertiliser granules, not eggs. Don't worry, I made the same mistake myself when learning. Good luck with your gardening. Pam in Bristol |
#3
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Pam Moore wrote:
On Mon, 28 Mar 2005 16:34:58 +0000, paul wrote: hi my wife and i have just started gardening. i have been turning the soil, weeding and planting this week and we have both noticed that under the soil there seems to be yellow/orange eggs everywhere, they are about 3mm in diameter and when you squeeze them they are quite hard and they pop/snap and emit a white mucus. ay ideas, i have searched the net and cant find anything. you gardening experts can help me i know you can. thanks in advance for the relplies. paul Sounds like slow release fertiliser granules, not eggs. Don't worry, I made the same mistake myself when learning. Good luck with your gardening. If these are in a new gardener's soil, they aren't likely to be fertiliser. I know these things usually are, but I don't think fertiliser granules pop and squirt slimy stuff from a hardish "shell". They sound like the eggs of some living thing, and I wouldn't worry about them at all: if it's a problem, the birds will probably solve it. Just garden away, and you'll be fine. -- Mike. |
#4
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Just garden away, and you'll be fine.
agreed. I come across many similar but white egg things whilst digging, i believe them to be slug eggs and leave them exposed as a tasty snack for the birds. Have also seen ants taking away slug eggs for ant snacks (definately not their own elongated ant larva) |
#5
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"Mike Lyle" wrote in
: If these are in a new gardener's soil, they aren't likely to be fertiliser. I know these things usually are, but I don't think fertiliser granules pop and squirt slimy stuff from a hardish "shell". I was emptying an pot of old compost yesterday, and found a nice 'clutch' of fertiliser granules at the bottom that did exactly that. Hard case, content white goo. They may have been 2 years old even, can't remember now! Unless the garden (not just the gardener) is absolutely brand new and unused, and you are quite sure that no-one has been chucking their old compost sneakily into a corner, fertiliser granules would be my bet too. Victoria -- gardening on a north-facing hill in South-East Cornwall -- |
#6
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paul wrote:
:: hi my wife and i have just started gardening. :: i have been turning the soil, weeding and planting this week and we :: have both noticed that under the soil there seems to be :: yellow/orange eggs everywhere, they are about 3mm in diameter and :: when you squeeze them they are quite hard and they pop/snap and :: emit a white mucus. ay ideas, i have searched the net and cant :: find anything. :: you gardening experts can help me i know you can. :: thanks in advance for the relplies. :: paul They are worm eggs...they are a sort of dark yellowish colour and with a slight 'nipple(!)' at one end....if you don't beleive me, just gather a few together and place them in some damp, clean compost, and in a few weeks time you will have some baby worms. I have seen this many times with worms I have collected for fishing, if forgotten about and left for any length of time in damp soil, dozens of these eggs appear - I noticed it just last week with worms collected last October and they had overwintered in my hallway in a baitbox inside a dark tackle box. |
#7
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fantastic!! thanks for the replies!
as long as they dont belong to some naughty root eating critter im not bothered what they are, the closest match i have found so far is slug eggs. thanks for your ideas. paul |
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