Woodlice?

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rich p

ridiculous old lush
Location
Brighton
What is the point? Ugly, inedible and ubiquitous. Every time I move a chair or a plant pot, there they are. Loads of the little b*stards, breeding away, making little poo stains.
Ban them, I say.
 

asterix

Comrade Member
Location
Limoges or York
Have you tried writing to your MP?
 

battered

Guru
I like 'em. Great little things. There seem to be several million in my garden, and they love the compost bin in my parents' garden. So does at least one large grass snake, and it also likes eating woodlice. I'm not sure that this arrangement would suit me, were I a woodlouse, but they haven't complained or moved out yet.
 

longers

Legendary Member
They've probably got poisonous ones in Australia.
 

BlueDog

Veteran
Location
Somerset
Fine in the garden, but I have a woodburner and have to store the logs next to it so they can dry out. The problem is all the logs arrive damp and seem to be infested with the damn things. I’m constantly finding them all over the house, along with new nests full with millions of delightful off-springs.

Other than crawling up my nose at night, they don’t seem to have caused aproblem, but I’m still trying to find a good way of exterminating the pesky little blighters from my world.

 

Maz

Guru
Woodlice are edible, although I dont think I'd fancy them.
I remember Hugh FearnleyW cooked them in rock buns [or something] on one of his TV series.
 

newbiebiker

New Member
Woodlice are edible, although I dont think I'd fancy them.
I remember Hugh FearnleyW cooked them in rock buns [or something] on one of his TV series.



Yay! I hope he enjoys them. Maybe when things comes to worse I'll have eat them.
 

asterix

Comrade Member
Location
Limoges or York
Fine in the garden, but I have a woodburner and have to store the logs next to it so they can dry out. The problem is all the logs arrive damp and seem to be infested with the damn things. I’m constantly finding them all over the house, along with new nests full with millions of delightful off-springs.

Other than crawling up my nose at night, they don’t seem to have caused aproblem, but I’m still trying to find a good way of exterminating the pesky little blighters from my world.


Leave the logs to dry outside the house. Drying them inside absorbs valuable heat anyway.
 
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