R2elk
Deeply Rooted
From caged coyotes.Coyote urine? Don’t even want to know HOW you collect that......
From caged coyotes.Coyote urine? Don’t even want to know HOW you collect that......
Good points all, Zeedman.I agree that animals learn, and in my experience, scent deterrents only work for a short time, if at all. Taste deterrents work a little better; but the more effective & potent the substance, the less likely you would want to apply it to anything intended for food use.
The fact that deer learn & remember can be used against them though. My rural garden only has a 6' fence, which they could easily jump over. The bottom 3' of the fence is chicken wire to keep out rabbits; the remaining 3' is several strands of aluminum electric fence wire. I've found that if I charge the wire at the beginning of the season, the deer get bitten - and remember. I can then turn the fence off for the rest of the summer. Aluminum fence wire not only is more conductive than steel wire (for a much stronger spark), it is also shiny & because it doesn't rust, it remains highly visible for years.
But as I found out one year, if the fence isn't turned on until the deer have gotten in & had a taste of something they like, they WILL get back in - even breaking through the wire to do so (which to judge by the tufts of fur left on the broken wire, must have hurt).
Deer generally won't jump a fence if they don't see a clear place to land; so even with shorter fences, having tall trellises or poles several feet inside the fence line will keep deer from jumping over. That is one of the benefits of gardening vertically as much as possible, where deer are present. Tall tomato cages, or any other structures that obscure the ground, work as well. The few times that deer have jumped in were (with the one exception noted above) early in the season, either just before or just after planting, when trellises & cages had not yet been erected.
As much of a PITA as my resident deer population can be (they often bed down in my back yard at night) they are actually the easiest herbivores to keep out of my vegetable garden. They really ravage my ornamentals though... and fenced-in flowers are not aesthetically pleasing. Fortunately they don't seem to like daffodils, marigolds, digitalis, or geraniums (and only occasionally bother roses or petunias) so they generously allow me to grow a few flowers in my front yard.
...(and only occasionally bother roses or petunias) so they generously allow me to grow a few flowers in my front yard.
Mine are all the miniature roses we discussed recently. Maybe larger roses, with thicker canes, are more succulent? It's crazy how deer can get past those thorns... makes my mouth sore just thinking about it.i'm surprised at that because my brother has never been able to have roses for long at his place as the deer mow them right down. maybe they are different type of rose that is more tasty?
Mine are all the miniature roses we discussed recently. Maybe larger roses, with thicker canes, are more succulent? It's crazy how deer can get past those thorns... makes my mouth sore just thinking about it.
I rarely have had a problem with deer destroying my garden plants. One did take a nap on my poinsettia that I was hoping would survive after Christmas. The pointsetta didn't make it after that episode!I have only very seldom had a deer problem. (If'n @thistlebloom 's moose show up - oh, Good Grief !)
This season, Growing a Greener World has a good show on deer and other pests. LINK
Joe may be making a few controversial statements like: soap and pie pans hung in the garden work only for a very limited time; there is no evidence that human hair repels anything; and urine - human or otherwise - won't work for long!
Steve
I rarely have had a problem with deer destroying my garden plants. One did take a nap on my poinsettia that I was hoping would survive after Christmas. The pointsetta didn't make it after that episode!