Repelling Pesky Elk
By Sue Sume The Highway Shopper
Local elk and deer populations
have become so accustomed to human behavior that to chase them, screaming and
brandishing a small sledgehammer while wearing only a bath towel, no longer has
the desired affect. The animals are not frightened into fleeing--but your
neighbors might be.
He is looking RIGHT AT ME as he munches! |
A better method is to apply the product PlantSkydd,
available from DeGoede’s and elsewhere. PlantSkydd is made of animal blood (one
can only hope it was from the actual elk that ate all of my lilies) so while
wet it stinks, and it does stain the plants, but it will stay on plants through
quite a bit of rain, including in winter. Regular three-month applications are
enough to keep elk from eating your plants over the winter, but summertime
applications can be trickier. When plants are sprayed during budding time, the
elk won’t eat the sprayed buds, but as new buds coming on, elk will carefully nibble
any unsprayed buds. New growth is at risk.
Another product found
to work well is Liquid Fence, sold at Packwood ACE Hardware and elsewhere. One
look at the beautiful planters in front of Four U Realty will attest to the effectiveness
of this product. Apply to dry plants. I recommend making sure all of your windows
are closed before applying it to plants near your house. Trust me on this.
Both products are
best used in combination with the Scarecrow automatic motion-sensing sprinklers.
That way elk have no time to stand around your garden, sniffing out the
random petunia your stinky spray might
have missed. Using last year’s batteries in your Scarecrow is not advisable as
elk are known to sense any weakness in your defense system and will wait just
out of range until the battery dies.
No comments:
Post a Comment