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5 years ago
Well no wonder !
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- posted
5 years ago
raccoons/possums/squirrels ignore the tomatoes here. not sure why. we don't really have many squirrels in our yard (too open the hawks chase them).
are you having a dry spell? consider putting some water sources out and about away from the garden.
unfortunately once creatures find a food source for one reason they tend to keep coming back.
songbird
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- posted
5 years ago
Groundhogs are eating my neighbors tomatoes. Time for the Hav-a-hart trap.
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- posted
5 years ago
22-250 from 300 yards .
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5 years ago
OK , I know most of y'all don't have the conditions I do here living out in the woods . So trap the l'il sucker , carry him out into the woods (so to speak) and cap him there .
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5 years ago
If I could shoot out back, I'd use my .22LR. Trapping laws vary and around here you can trap and kill but not release off your property. I trap and release anyway. When I was still working in the lab with access to chemicals an older chemist told me to pour a bottle of chloroform down the groundhog's burrow where the heavy vapor would settle underground in the tunnel bottom. Groundhog would go in and get anesthetized permanently. It worked for one in my back yard.
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- posted
5 years ago
Do they explode when you hit them?
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5 years ago
I have a lot of customers up in the mountains. The have to build fully enclosed enclosures if they want a garden. And they have to line the floor with bricks or tile to keep critters from digging under the walls. The enclosures look pretty, but they tend to be awfully small. Would only fit 1/5 of my garden.
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5 years ago
Have you tried dry ice down their holes?
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5 years ago
Depends on the load ... a 22-250 hollow point at 3800 fps MV , yes . A .243 HP at 3300 , maybe if you hit the body . Regular .22 LR , no .
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5 years ago
A rabbit/hare won't go down with a 22 LR.
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5 years ago
Sure they will but probably not right away unless hit in the head or the spine.
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5 years ago
No but it might work too. I prefer the Hav-a-hart and tell people I relocate them to more affluent neighborhoods.
I took a couple with a bow at deer camp I used to go to. Taste like chicken.
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5 years ago
Squirrels too . Unless you get a head or upper spine shot they ain't hangin' around . I've seen them drag themselves off and claw their way up a tree with their back legs totally dead . I have declared war on the local squirrel population , they are apparently the major destroyers of my tomato patch .I figger if I kill all the ones that know there's a bounty there , the better chance the few tomatoes left will have a chance . There are still a lot of blossoms ... and they too deserve a chance . TOMATO LIVES MATTER !
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5 years ago
Friend in a nearby development uses subsonic .22LR on them. Another, bothered by them, asked what to do and I suggested a pellet gun but now he uses his shotgun as with 40 acres he can do anything. He just wanted to keep them out when he was not around. Squirrel population bounces back but if you get rid of the locals that are already hanging around you probably remove most of the problem. They look cute but are nothing but tree rats.
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5 years ago
Funny you should mention shotguns ... I was considering using one , kinda like an instant gratification thing . I also (usually) use subsonic .22 ammo , and they seldom expire on the spot .
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5 years ago
I guess it depends on the noise level you can get away with. I can't shoot in my yard most of the time and the critters are not around when I might be able to shoot them. That's the beauty of a trap, it is always there and waiting to trap them. Then you can dispatch them in the trap as it can be a nuisance to transport a lot of them. I once had to take a half dozen trips to release squirrels before I finally caught the groundhog I was after.
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5 years ago
Frank , I live 12 miles from the nearest town in a clearing out in the woods ... noise is not a problem . There are neighbors , but we can only see one of them . In the winter , when the trees are bare .
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5 years ago
Trouble may come if someone hears a shot when not expected. I'm thinking of incident in friends deer camp that had neighbors calling the game warden in on us to check the camp. One of the hunters there had fired a few tracer rounds after dark just to see what they looked like and somebody living maybe a quarter mile away called the game warden.
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- posted
5 years ago
The neighbors are more likely to trigger off a few rounds than I am . Unless I'm sighting in something it's very rare to shoot more than one round ...