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They usually don't like hairy plants or smelly plants so stachys lanata and lavander are usually safe. They also don't eat aquilegia as they have some nasty tasting chemical in them. There's a list of plants here that you could try - http://www.gardenersworld.com/plants/features/flowers/slug-proof-plants/1115.html
they don't attack the ones with blue slug pellets scattered around the base of plants !!
G A don't use the organicslug pellets they don't work use only the blue onesplace a pile under an empty butter container to keep off rain and birds from pecking make a hole in container side so slugs can get in and DIE!!jim
I have a huge snail problem in my flower border, but these perennials are never attacked; phlox, knapweed, scabious, acanthus, crocosmia, japanese anemone, lysimachia - they just go on and on, and for biennials they don't attack sweet william, wallflower or evening primrose - I suppose slugs and snails eat the same thing? Don't bother trying hostas or lupins!
Aquilegias, I have loads and the slugs don't bother them. Our garden is full of snails having an old stone wall all around. Slugs and snails eat everything else.
My slugs seem to like irises and have often nibbled the flowering stalks until they keel over before the blooms open. I buy a melon, cut it in half, scoop out the flesh and eat it. I put the two skin halves is the flower bed with the rounded area uppermost, then check underneath them periodically to remove the slugs. It gets rid of a few of them.
sorry last post went all wrongits called metaldehyde