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| It's getting a bit dark now to head out with some chicken wire, but if any of those beans that I've been cherishing got hurt... Maybe I should invest in a shotgun. Do I really have to put chicken wire around all of the veg beds? Will they even eat the rhubarb? Can I put something around seedlings and take it off once they're big enough to defend themselves? |
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| Rabbits will tend to eat anything. Do you ahve a dog pref male to wee around the veg patch (not on the veg obviously ) Protect with wire also, and plant more you can always share with the bunnies that way. Other options, shoot them and put them in pie with your spuds and carrots - free tea. Sorry for those who think thats cruel but rabbits are big pests and we have aways eaten them. Just to point out they also eat flowers like lavender I know why Good luck with the bunnies, cute they may be but big eaters thats for sure.
__________________ Bec ---------------------------------------------- Am now happy - I can get out in the polytunnel again with the warmer weather. |
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| Snares are excellent and theres notyhing like a trapped bunny to scare off his mates for a while. Careful bunny is healthy before eating him though and learn how to dispatch him as quickly and painlessly as you can. |
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| Hello Sage, I'm not one of the kill them, shoot them brigade. BUT 2 exceptions to my rule - rabbits and rats. Kill them on sight. Rabbits eat everything ! And if you have 1 today you will have thousands shortly. It's not possible to garden with rabbits. Rats are disease carrying vermin - and they breed like rabbits. 6 this week - 6 thousand at the end of the year. There are all kinds of remedies on the go but in my experience only 1 solution to these 2 pests.
__________________ From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs. |
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| If they don't eat it, they will dig it up. It took me four years to get my veg field adjacent to the house rabbit free and now the garden (unfortunately thanks to a gun) also rabbit free. If you are going to exterminate any pests, do make sure it is cleanly and painlessly done. In Shetland we have a major problem with rabbits. They are destroying the farmlands of the south end of the island and gradually moving north. At the moment the pay is 15p per tail. Thankfully we have no major disease here, so what we kill we eat. A young active dog is also a good deterrant, but not complete! Our Aimee caught a rabbit in the adjacent field last week (naughty as she's not supposed to be out of the garden) and brought it back, totally unharmed, carried by the scruff of its neck and just dropped it at my feet! The rabbit (and me) was stunned. That one lived to see another day thankfully, as we only get rid of those that come into the garden. Unfortunately rabbits and gardening just do not mix. |
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| Hello Sage and welcome No, I think Rhubarb may be an exception, but i'm afraid that chicken wire is probably the best bet and go down a foot as well. Whatever hasbeen says about putting his bunny mates off- a screaming rabbit is a sickening sound most likely to put you off as well- I can't stand it and I've been happily and remorslessly killing them since I was 10. Although a gun and a halogen lamp is pretty efficient it requires certain skills and understanding neighbours. however good you are there are always more as they do indeed breed like ....rabbits
__________________ Advertising is the rattling of a stick in a swill bucket. George Orwell Paul |
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| When putting chicken wire in make sure it is burried a spades depth and that it is folded flat (outwards) in the bottom of the trench. Like and outward pointing L. The idea is that rabbits will still dig down to go under the fence but if the hit horizontal fencing they will stop. Also if you're going to be shooting I'd advise on a rifle not a shotgun otherwise you'll have no plants left either ![]() |
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| For years I was plagued with rabbits and spent too much time fencing. However, 18 months ago a feral cat and her 3 kittens turned up and consequently adopted us. We look after them and in return they keep all furry nibbling creatures at bay - well recommended. |
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| oh all those poor bunnies! you might just injure some and give them a slow painful death.but at the same time im all for killing an animal if youre going to eat it.I couldnt kill one,if i could i wouldnt be veggie lol. |
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| My cat presented me with a baby rabbit this morning. He put it next to his dinner bowl after he'd given up playing with it, so I think he wanted it skinned cooked and cut into bite sized pieces. I've seen a few new holes in the garden, but no damage to my lettuces yet. Cat 1 - Rabbits 0 I need to train him to guard the perimeter of the vegetable patch now. |
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| Leave them - but maybe netted! - they should re-sprout. Did you ever do the old trick as a kid of putting a chopped off carrot top in a sacuer of water? You get a whole new lot of carrot foliage. Second thoughts - are you sure it's not slugs? A slug ate some of mine in a pot this year. The new row sown in the garden is netted and pelletted.
__________________ Earth laughs in flowers. Ralph Waldo Emerson www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated November 17th - The Big Dig Last edited by Flummery; 17-05-2007 at 10:14 AM. Reason: To add second thought |














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