For daily wit & wisdom, sign up for the 蜜桃恋人 newsletter.
No content available.
Why are you seeing a container of oil in my garden? Unfortunately, it has been a banner year for earwigs in the vegetable garden. I tested five earwig trap ideas to figure out which worked best! See my results and learn to make your own earwig trap!
You know, those crawly critters with the pinchers on their tail end. If their looks aren鈥檛 enough to creep you out, then the old wives鈥 tale about them crawling into your ear at night and burrowing into your brain should do it. Of course, none of that is true! Darn, those old wives! Earwigs are a common garden inhabitant, and it seems like everything in the garden that I disturb or move, even just a little bit, usually has a few hiding under it.
Earwig Damage to the Garden
It took me a while to put 2 and 2 together and come up with earwigs as the problem when my rutabagas were under attack.
Every day, more and more leaves were eaten until they looked like tattered rags. Normally, I would blame a caterpillar, but since we grow most of the brassicas under a shade cloth tunnel to keep moths from laying eggs on them, I had to rule that out.
Plus, there weren鈥檛 any caterpillars to be found or their tell-tale droppings. Slugs were my second guess, but it has been a dry year, and I haven鈥檛 seen many slugs. Also, there was no trace of the slime trail they left behind. The damage is limited to just the rutabagas, and even though they are planted next to broccoli and cabbage plants, they have not been touched at all鈥攁 puzzle. Then, when harvesting bok choy from another part of the garden, I noticed that those plants had similar damage.
When I shook them upside down after cutting them, several earwigs fell out. Aha! We have seen them in the past, mostly on the dahlias and zinnia flowers, but I was under the impression that they were actually beneficial in the garden. They are known to eat aphids and insect larvae but feed mostly on decaying plant matter.
Then I learned that the nymphs do the most damage, eating holes in the leaves of young plants while the adults eat the flowers. The teenage nymphs look very like the adults, but their shells are softer and less dark.
The adults and the nymphs feed at night, dining under the cover of darkness and sleeping it off in a moist, shady spot during the day. I decided to try to eradicate them from the rutabagas by trapping them. After searching through several books and websites, I found 5 traps to try:
Testing Five Earwig Traps
Trap #1 had me punch holes near the rim of a small plastic container, add some oil, and add a bit of soy sauce. Then, I replaced the lid and buried the container with the holes level with the top of the soil. All it caught were ants鈥攍oads of tiny ants, drawn by the promise of Chinese food, I guess.
Trap #2 was a toilet paper tube stuffed with straw placed among the plants under attack. It was a bit more successful, as it caught one earwig.
Trap #3 was a can with some leftover beer in it. (Honestly, who has leftover beer?) I thought at least it would catch a slug or two, but it caught nothing, as slugs love beer. They probably didn鈥檛 like the cheap brand I bought.
Trap #4 was a crumpled, damp newspaper stuffed into a flowerpot. I hung the flowerpot upside-down next to the rutabagas and again caught nothing. Maybe they had already read the comics from that day鈥檚 paper.
Trap # 5 was the 鈥渙il trap,鈥 which was simply a small container baited with fishy-smelling oil. That was the most successful trap. It caught about a dozen earwigs in one night!
You could also bait it with canola oil. Some folks add bacon grease or hamburger fat, as earwigs love greasy, oily stuff. But I didn鈥檛 have anything like that in the house. Plus, this could attract larger critters, including raccoons and skunks, so if your garden is not fenced to keep them out, you might not want to risk it.
Another idea to test is to cover the container with a lid, cut an entry hole in the lid, and then empty and refill every week or so. That way, you only catch earwigs (no other insect is interested in the oil trap).
I assume that the heavy amount of mulch we use in the garden contributes to the rise in the earwig population. Next spring, I might wait and use straw mulch later in the season after the nymphs have matured. The earwigs have stopped feeding, and my rutabagas seem to be recovering. Next year, I will try to be more observant and take action sooner if the plants are under attack again because I love my rutabagas!
I sat there saying yep, yep, me too. Same oyster tin, too, and also a million ants and no earwigs. I changed tactics. I use the flat plastic hummus containers with success. Fill 1/4鈥 to 3/8鈥 of oil. I used canola because it鈥檚 the cheapest I could find. I had saved the oyster oil and put a little in each of 6 containers. I put them in 6 large planters that have peppers. Just on top of or even with the mulch. Caught earwigs. I use pine cones in the planters for mulch. One thing I found was I have to soak them in soap and water as that鈥檚 where they like to hang out. I didn鈥檛 know that until I picked a bunch of cones and put them in a bag. When I got home the bag was full of earwigs. If I can figure out I鈥檒l send pictures.
I also had trouble starting root vegetables and after some research found an excellent method. Cut paper towel tubes down to 7 or 8鈥 and fill them with seed starting mix. (Toilet paper tubes are too short). I bundled mine up with string for stability and set them in a dish bin. Sow your parsnips in the tubes, keep them watered and in a sunny window. The parsnips send down a deep tap root before the seedling appears. Once the seedling appears, I plant the whole tube. Works like a charm!!! I also found that composting my root veggies has helped them immensely.
"I assume that the heavy amount of mulch we use in the garden is contributing to the rise in the earwig population." ABSOLUTELY the culprit! I quit using mulch & have little problem with EW. I found a cluster this year in a squirrel feeder. I propped it open with a twig for a couple of days & all were gone.