Showa Thermo Gloves - The Showa Thermo Gloves are thermal, fleece lined for warmth, comfortable, durable, flexible and washable, they are the ideal gloves for weeding, planting, transplanting and all general work in the garden, greenhouse and home.
• Easily machine washed and dried • A close fitting seamless knitted acrylic/polyester/cotton glove • A rough anti-skid latex coating which combines warmth, grip and dexterity • Showa recommend them for work outdoors or in cold rooms. • Excellent combination of “Grip Glove” performance and insulated liner • Printed with 451 on the back • Warm, breathable, seamless cotton/acrylic liner • Anatomically designed for exceptional comfort, dexterity and fit • Excellent durability, tear and abrasion resistance • Anti-bacterial treatment to reduce odours • Now only available in large (size 9)
What The Experts Say...
"These gloves offer a different but increasingly popular solution to keeping hands warm and protected in the garden. A cosy acrylic/cotton/polyester knit liner is coated with latex on the palms and fingers to provide good protection, waterproofing and grip. Easy to machine wash at 40°C. Verdict - 4 Stars."Tried and Tested - Gloves, Gardens Monthly magazine, February 2009
"I find the Tough Touch fit me perfectly; warm and tough, they become even lovelier as they age. But for really muddy work, I use the new stretchy Showa gloves..." 50 Must-Haves for a Perfect Winter Garden, Helen Yemm and Ursula Buchan choose the best tools and plants that every gardener needs for the months ahead, Telegraph Gardening 10th November 2008
Nemaslug Slug Killer is fast gaining a reputation as the organic way of winning the garden battle against slugs and this silent killer owes its success - and the adulation of gardeners, allotment owners, kitchen gardeners and vegetable growers across the country - to a greedy little nematode named phasmarhabditis hermaphrodita.
Simple to apply, impossible to overdose and totally safe to use around children, pets and wildlife, Nemaslug Slug Killer slips seamlessly into any organic gardening set-up or otherwise and each treatment will give 6 weeks protection against marauding slugs. Just mix the nematodes with water, choose a watering can with a coarse rose - or make life even easier with a hosepipe applicator - and water on the garden from the start of the growing season once soil temperatures hit 5ºC.
Our range of Nemaslug Slug Killer pack sizes (small and large) and programmes - developed by gardeners for gardeners - will help you find just the right treatment for your garden and allow you to grow slug-free vegetables and plants at last. Buy the 3 treatment programme for 18 weeks worth of protection and save £4.00 on postage
Please Note: This live product is despatched to UK addresses only!
• Nemaslug Slug Killer is available in two sizes and three pack options: • Small Pack Nemaslug treats up to 40sq metres • Large Pack Nemaslug treats up to 100sq metres • Small 2 Stage Programme Pack Nemaslug - 2 small treatments despatched at six week intervals • Large 2 Stage Programme Pack Nemaslug - 2 large treatments despatched at six week intervals • Small 3 Stage Programme Pack Nemaslug - 3 small treatments despatched at six week intervals • Large 3 Stage Programme Pack Nemaslug - 3 large treatments despatched at six week intervals • Nemaslug Slug Killer can be kept in the fridge for up to three weeks before application • Apply with a coarse rose watering can or hosepipe feeder • Use once soil temperatures reach 5ºC - typically March to November • Kills slugs in the soil so no messy corpses to clear up • Nematodes naturally present in soil and treatment boosts numbers for a 6 week period • Impossible to overdose
What The Experts Say... "Nemaslug - Will this biological control really mean no more slugs in our gardens?" Which? magazine reports on a Nemaslug trial - Does it Work? Yes. 72 per cent of those taking part in our Nemaslug trial found it an effective way of controlling slugs. In fact, 42 per cent said it was more effective than their usual method..." Which Magazine, May 2008