This Pretty Garden Ornament Is Secretly a Slug Trap – and It's Currently on Sale

A cute ceramic garden decoration? Think again; this is actually a discreet slug trap in disguise, and gardeners swear by it.

A beautiful ornamental garden with cutout of ceramic snail trap layered on top.
(Image credit: elenaleonova/Getty Images/Amazon)

I have a long-standing issue with slugs. Specifically, their complete lack of respect for my garden and their unwavering commitment to treating my precious lupins like an all-you-can-eat buffet.

Every year it becomes a familiar cycle: I plant something I love, it looks promising for a while, and then one night the slugs arrive en masse and reduce it to tatters. I’ve tried ignoring it, I’ve tried relocating them (an exercise in futility), and I’ve even considered my neighbour’s approach of standing outside at night with a torch like some kind of vegetable vigilante. And my husband’s very boring advice (why don’t you just plant the sort of things that slugs won’t eat?) doesn’t even bear thinking about.

I won’t use chemicals, because I know they’re terrible for the entire ecosystem, so I am entirely restricted to environmentally friendly options to remove slugs and snails. When I came across a ceramic slug trap disguised as a pretty garden ornament, then, you had best believe I was intrigued.

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A Slug Trap in Disguise

The Esschert Design snail-shaped slug trap is exactly what it sounds like: a small ceramic ornament designed to sit in your borders and quietly deal with slugs without shouting about it. From a distance, it just looks like a slightly whimsical garden decoration. Up close, it’s doing something far more practical.

So how does it actually work?

Esschert Design Snail Shaped Ceramic Slug Trap, Green

(Image credit: Amazon)

The idea is simple. You fill the base with a liquid attractant (most commonly beer, although some gardeners use yeast mixtures) and place it at soil level in your beds or pots. Slugs are drawn to the smell, climb inside, and are trapped. The ceramic lid helps protect the bait from rain and keeps everything discreet, which is part of the appeal if you’d rather not scatter beer traps across your flowerbeds.

It’s a passive system, which means no chemicals, no electricity, no late-night slug patrol required. Just set it, place it, and check it every so often. And gardeners are singing its praises as a result.

Yes, reviews consistently mention that it blends into planting schemes far better than makeshift solutions like old yoghurt pots or metal tins. One gardener said they caught 11 slugs overnight using beer as bait, and described the trap as durable and easy to clean and reuse.

Another simply called it “darling,” which is not usually a word you associate with pest control, but here we are.

Others compared this slug trap directly to traditional beer traps in tins, saying it performs just as well but looks significantly better doing it. And hey, I think we can all agree that there’s something deeply satisfying about pest control that doesn’t make your garden look like a science experiment.

Does it completely solve a slug problem? Probably not. Most gardeners will tell you that slug control is about reduction, not eradication. But as part of a wider approach, alongside planting choices and a bit of persistence, it seems to make a noticeable difference.

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At the very least, it replaces the slightly grim ritual of beer traps in random containers with something that actually looks like it belongs in the garden.

And if you’re anything like me, that alone is worth it.

Kayleigh Dray
Content Editor

Kayleigh is an enthusiastic (sometimes too enthusiastic!) gardener and has worked in media for over a decade. She previously served as digital editor at Stylist magazine, and has written extensively for Ideal Home, Woman & Home, Homes & Gardens, and a handful of other titles. Kayleigh is passionate about wildlife-friendly gardening, and recently cancelled her weekend plans to build a mini pond when her toddler found a frog living in their water barrel. As such, her garden – designed around the stunning magnolia tree at its centre – is filled to the brim with pollinator-friendly blooms, homemade bird feeders, and old logs for insects to nest in.