04/05/2026
There's an American Toad in your garden right now that just woke up from five months underground. It weighs less than a couple of ounces. And it ate thousands of pest insects in your yard last summer.
It'll do it again this year if you give it three things.
A toad hunts the soil surface every night — slugs, beetles, ants, cutworms, earwigs, pill bugs. It targets pests exactly where they do their damage, on the ground in the dark, and it returns to the same garden bed night after night for the entire growing season. A garden with a couple of resident toads has noticeably less slug damage and fewer chewed seedlings than one without.
The toad doesn't need much. But without these three things it moves on to a yard that has them.
🐸 Three things the toad needs to stay:
1. A shelter — a broken clay pot turned upside down with a chipped edge for entry. Place it in a shaded spot near the garden bed, under a shrub, beside the compost, or along the fence. The toad needs a cool dark humid hiding spot to survive daytime heat. Without one, it leaves. A flat rock propped up on one side or a short section of PVC pipe half-buried in soil works too
2. A water source — a shallow dish sunk into the ground near the shelter with about an inch of water. A terra cotta saucer works. Toads don't drink the way you'd expect — they absorb water through permeable skin on their belly by sitting in the dish. Change the water every few days to prevent mosquito breeding
3. No chemicals in the bed — slug pellets kill the toad that eats the slugs. Lawn herbicides and pesticides leach into garden soil and are absorbed through the toad's permeable skin on contact. The single most effective thing you can do for garden pest control is stop spraying and let the toad work
🐸 Why this works better than products:
- The toad hunts every night from spring through fall without reapplication. A chemical treatment works once and needs repeating
- The toad targets the pests that are active on the soil surface at night — exactly the ones that damage seedlings, eat lettuce, and chew roots. It's hunting where the damage happens
- A toad that finds shelter, water, and chemical-free soil in your garden becomes a resident for years. It returns to the same hiding spot every morning and the same hunting route every night
- The broken pot, the saucer, and the decision to stop spraying cost nothing and take five minutes to set up
One broken pot. One shallow dish. No spray. The toad handles the rest 🌿