The best form of pest control is to use nature’s own checks  and balances to keep pest numbers down. There are several ways in which you can  ensure these checks and balances are in place, allowing you to sit back and  enjoy the fruits of your labor instead of relying on potentially harmful  pesticides to deal with any problems.
        It’s important to remember that there aren’t armies of pests  waiting to get hold of your prized vegetables the minute you’ve planted them.  Bad weather and poor growing methods such as overcrowding are more likely to  ruin your crop. However, the pests most likely to damage your vegetables are  birds (which also eat many garden pests), slugs and snails.  
		![Blue tit on a bird feeder]() 
        Creating an ecosystem
        However small your garden or vegetable plot, it should have  a self-regulating ecosystem in place to control pests and keep your plants  healthy. The simplest way to create this ecosystem is to plant a range of  plants which attract natural predators that feed on pests. Ideally, these  plants should provide food (in the form of nectar, fruit and pollen) and  shelter for predators and sacrificial crops to maintain pest colonies. A  sacrificial crop could be a clump of nettles. This will harbor aphids which  will feed predators such as ladybirds and lacewings. If any aphids then attack  your crops, the ladybirds and lacewings will be on standby to clear them up.
        If you have room, a pond (even a very small pond) is useful  for keeping pest numbers down. It will encourage frogs (which eat slugs) and  bats (which eat mosquitoes and other flying insects). If the pond has a shallow  area, it will also provide water for mammals such as hedgehogs (which eat  slugs).
        The following common predators keep pest numbers in check:
        
          - Birds eat slugs, snails, grubs, wireworms, caterpillars and insects
- Frogs and Toads eat slugs, snails and various insects
- Ladybugs and lacewings eat aphids such as blackfly and whitefly
You can attract various predators to your plot with a few simple  planting techniques. A few bird feeders will encourage more birds on to your  plot. A nesting box or wild patch will encourage hedgehogs. Lacewings and  ladybugs can be encouraged to visit by planting candytuft, sunflowers and  marigolds (see our full article on Flowers for Vegetable Gardens for a detailed illustrated guide).
        Regular inspections
        It is important to check your vegetables for pests on a  regular basis. A small clump of aphids on your broad beans is nothing to worry  about (a healthy plant will shrug off the pests as we might deal with a cold),  but if it becomes an infestation, you need to remove it. Simply rub the aphids  off the plants with your fingers, or blast them with a jet from your hose. If  the infestation is only small, leave it there. Predators will soon hone in on  the pests and lay their eggs. For example, lacewing and ladybird larvae can eat  as many as 150 aphids per day and produce new generations to control your pests  next year. 
				![Ladybugs can eat up to 150 aphids a day!]() 
        Barriers and traps
        If you don’t want to rely on nature exclusively, barriers  can be used to prevent pests reaching your crop. Cloches can be used to protect  tender crops, such as lettuces, from slugs and various forms of netting can be  used to ward off birds, butterflies and aphids. For example you can protect  your brassicas (such as cabbages and broccoli) with netting to prevent pigeons  from eating the seedlings and butterflies from laying eggs on them. If you have  room, a fruit cage will protect your fruit from hungry birds (which tend to  attack your crop before you’ve even noticed it’s ready). Fleece can be placed  over carrots to prevent carrot root flies from laying eggs on the young roots  and destroying the crop. 
        Earwigs can devastate seedlings and soft fruit or sweet corn  silks. If they do pose a problem in your garden, you could try filling a few  plastic flowerpots with straw and balancing them upside down on sticks to  attract the pests. The earwigs crawl up the poles and take shelter in the pots  at night and you can empty them and dispose of the pests in the morning. Sticky  bands placed on the trunks of trees can stop pests from reaching the fruit.  Sticky boards and fly paper can be used in greenhouses to trap and kill all  sort of flying insect pests. There are many ways to trap and kill slugs (and a  host of different products on the market that promise to do just that). An easy  way to trap and kill them is to sink a dish filled with beer into the soil. The  slugs flock to it, get drunk on the beer and drown. Mice and moles can removed  using humane traps. Birds can be warded off by scarecrows. 
        Summary
        
          - When it comes to pests, prevention is better than cure
- Developing and maintaining a natural ecosystem encourages natural predators to keep pest numbers down
- Regularly checking your crops ensures that any nasty surprises are avoided
- It is sometimes necessary to use barriers or traps to combat pests