• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Frugal Gardening

Simple ways to save money while you garden

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Garden Frugally
  • Buy These
  • Privacy Policy
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter

Good Bugs for the Garden

November 14, 2022 by Ali Southerland Leave a Comment

 

How much gardening media is consumed with pest control topics? Gardening store shelves are filled with pesticides, and organic gardening books are full of tactics to beat bugs with more natural tools. But having a bug-free garden is a bad thing. Here are some good bugs for the garden.

Why are Bugs Beneficial to a Garden?

Your garden is an ecosystem that relies on healthy soil. And bugs play a massive part in maintaining the soil. So much so that some soil scientists argue that invertebrate life can indicate healthy soil. Bugs can add organic matter to the soil, increase aeration, change the pH, increase drainage, and even deter other bugs from coming into your garden.

What Bugs are Good for the Garden?

Of course, there are some bugs you want to keep out of the garden, but what invertebrates are beneficial for the garden?

Worms

They eat all the organic matter that falls to the ground and becomes incorporated into the soil. This means they take nutrients that plants can’t use and turn them into something they can. They also aerate the soil as they move through it. This can bring much need oxygen into the soil and increase the area’s drainage. If you start working in the soil and notice the soil is gathered into tiny little pebbles, you probably have a good amount of worms in the ground.

If you want to bring more worms into your garden, you can buy them and introduce them. But please be careful. Buy worms that are native to your area so they will be adapted to live in the area. For North America, the most popular type is Red Wigglers (Eisenia Foetida).

Wolf Spiders

Wolf spiders get big and are quite capable of giving you a scare when you find one in the garden. But you have nothing to fear.

They will not hurt the plants or you and are not venomous. But they are predators that live on the ground without a web and will eat the bugs in your garden that will eat your plants. So they are like free pest control. And in the fall, you may see a mother wolf spider carrying dozens of babies on her back. It was pretty shocking the first time I saw it, but it is a great way to know they were doing their job and eating plenty of pests.

Garden Spiders

These are typically big, bright yellow, and black in North America. They spin webs to trap pests to eat them. They are usually very calm and fun to watch while spinning their webs.

Lady Bugs

Lady bugs (not to be confused with Asian Lady Beetles) eat aphids, and they do it aggressively. They eat scale, mealybugs, mites, eggs, and other soft-body invertebrates. To make your garden place ladybugs want to be, you should plant things with yellow or white flowers like dill, cilantro, fennel, or chives.

Conclusion

If you’re looking to create a healthy and thriving garden, you need to welcome good bugs into the mix. These beneficial insects will help keep harmful pests in check, while also pollinating your plants and providing other important services. So don’t be afraid to let them in – your garden will be all the better for it.

Read More:

Could I Make Money With Worm Farming? – Frugal Gardening

Ladybugs Versus Asian Lady Beetles – Frugal Gardening

7 Garden Inspection Tasks for Thriving Plants – Frugal Gardening

Ali Southerland

Ali is a homeschooling mom of 5 who includes gardening and food prep as important subjects in her school. She has been raising plants her whole life and learned how to garden from her father. When she isn’t caring for her plants, she can be found reading or hiking.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Garden Bugs, good bugs

Previous Post: « Tips for Keeping Your New Pup Out of Your Garden
Next Post: 5 Ways to Reduce Water Usage in the Garden »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Struggling to get your garden off the ground? Put those days behind you with our special starter kit – perfect for thrifty green thumbs everywhere. Get growing and add a splash of color today!

Popular Posts

  • usda free seeds websiteHow To Get Free Seeds From The Government by Amanda Blankenship Seeds might seem like a small expense, but any seasoned…
  • Enviro Ice On PlantsShould I Use Enviro Ice On My Plants? by Kathryn Vercillo Every week, I receive food from Hungryroot. It's a great…
  • is shredded paper good for the gardenFrom Trash to Treasure: Transform Shredded Paper Into Garden Gold by Amanda Blankenship Should you use shredded paper as garden mulch? It might…
  • Enviro IceWhat Happens to Plants If You Use Enviro Ice on Them? by Amanda Blankenship About a year ago, I wrote our first article about…
The Early Heat Trap: Why Sudden Warm Weather Is Stalling Growth

The Early Heat Trap: Why Sudden Warm Weather Is Stalling Growth

Spring shows up like it forgot how to knock politely. One week brings cool soil and steady growth, then a sudden burst of heat pushes everything into overdrive. Plants react fast, but the ground beneath them often refuses to keep pace. That mismatch creates a hidden problem many gardeners miss until leaves curl, seedlings stall,…

Read More

5 Crops You Can Still Start Now for a Late Summer Harvest

5 Crops You Can Still Start Now for a Late Summer Harvest

Gardens do not shut down just because the calendar edges past midsummer. In fact, this stretch of the growing season often creates one of the most exciting planting opportunities of the year. Warm soil speeds up germination, longer daylight hours push growth, and many crops actually prefer a late start over early-season stress. Smart gardeners…

Read More

6 Flower Varieties That Bloom Quickly After Late Spring Planting

6 Flower Varieties That Bloom Quickly After Late Spring Planting

Late spring planting opens the door to a garden that doesn’t waste time. Warm soil speeds up germination, longer daylight hours push growth forward, and certain flowers respond with impressive speed. Gardeners who want color without waiting all season often turn to fast-blooming varieties that thrive when planted just a little later than usual. These…

Read More

The Free Compost Trick: How to Turn Yard Waste Into $100 Worth of Soil

The Free Compost Trick: How to Turn Yard Waste Into $100 Worth of Soil

Fresh, crumbly soil that smells like a forest floor does not require a trip to the garden center or a pricey delivery fee. Yard waste sitting in bags, bins, and corners already holds the raw ingredients for rich compost that can replace store-bought soil amendments. Leaves, grass clippings, and kitchen scraps transform into nutrient-dense humus…

Read More

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Garden Frugally
  • Buy These
  • Privacy Policy
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2026 · Foodie Pro & The Genesis Framework