Was clearing my green house moving pots etc trays from under staging and on Gravel in damp area found one of theses
Is it a New Zealand Flat worm
Or I think it could be a Leach ?
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150358.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150357.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150356.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150355.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150353.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150359.jpg)
(http://i691.photobucket.com/albums/vv277/GRACELAND_01/P1150361.jpg)
over to the experts ;)
it's a flatworm, i think. We see them occasionally, especially after rain. They live under our flagstones
Leech, defo. I had them on my plot in Southend, and in Newbury. Look at the suckers on each end, they have a three-part mouth.
LEECH
(http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQB4xer3mAZ0QV2dxmG9Rm6ivhgT7Fz4JNyzRepY6RpWQT4WkdZlA)
ORANGE GARDEN FLATWORM
(http://farm1.static.flickr.com/21/34168979_67bf42be61_o.jpg)
I feel queasy :-X
what fantastic pics - they are great for eating snails you should find a mate for it ;D
That's a horseleech. Don't worry, it won't suck your blood. I used to find them on the watermeadows round Oxford when I was a kid.
:)
So its ok won,t cause any harm ???
It looks disgusting, is this one of the "good guys"? :-\
Quote from: montbrayon on March 19, 2011, 19:52:31
It looks disgusting, is this one of the "good guys"? :-\
Bear Grylls would eat one, no problemo.
(http://4funz.com/Funny-Pictures/random/img-bear-grylls-787)
Apparently leeches are used in East Grinstead hospital :o Would they be a different variety?
I found big unpatterned red/brown leeches very like this last year when the water table rose to the surface.
I was told they were vegetarian and usually lived on the edge of the water table - which is normally a metre down on my plot.
Quote from: Emagggie on March 19, 2011, 22:39:35
Apparently leeches are used in East Grinstead hospital :o Would they be a different variety?
That would be the medicinal leech, it's bigger, feeds on vertebrates when it gets the chance, and will suck your blood like Dracula.
I'd never garden again if I found something like that - yuk.
I have a hard time coping with worms and I know they are the good guys.
If you get leeches you know you're badly in need of drainage!
Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on March 20, 2011, 19:12:20
If you get leeches you know you're badly in need of drainage!
What, you personally, or the plot ?
Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on March 20, 2011, 19:12:20
If you get leeches you know you're badly in need of drainage!
So grow Celeriac... ;D
Quote from: saddad on March 22, 2011, 12:40:22
Quote from: Robert_Brenchley on March 20, 2011, 19:12:20
If you get leeches you know you're badly in need of drainage!
So grow Celeriac... ;D
;D toads, frogs, newts and slow worms, but no leeches spotted so far!!
Like I say, I used to find leeches on the watermeadows. There's a massive one just outside Oxford called Port Meadow. I could walk along the riverbank there, turn over logs as I went, and find dozens, along with plenty of frogs, which like grassland. You can imagine how well drained a watermeadow is! Of course, if you want a plot that's flooded half the year and waterlogged the rest of the time...
Port Meadow is inside Oxford.... nearly a third of Oxford's surface area is Port Meadow... it's huge, and like a giant blind-spot in how people think of the city stretching from Binsey to Wolvercote......
Perceptions have changed a bit since I was a kid - or maybe the city boundaries have expanded. It sounds as though everything within the ring road is now part of Oxford.