How to Keep Squirrels Away From Your Garden
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Put three or four sections of stove pipe over your feeder pole . Four , five , or six inch galvinized stove pipe will work .They can't use their claws and can't hug the pipe so , no access to the treats.
I live on the edge of a canyon in San Diego and there is a large population of animals, including squirrels. Squirrels come into my yard to feed but they don't bother my garden because I use physical barriers. In defense of squirrels, they alert me to the present of rattlesnakes, which there is also a large number of them. I know their alarm calls and see their tails move about so I know a snake is present.
Squirrels and birds are so bad in my small garden, I've considered planting them a larger garden all to themselves so they may not mess with my small one. But then I figured they'd just still start in my small one, finish it off, and then move on to the larger one and pick it clean. So I guess I'll just have to still try to beat them to a tomato and an ear of corn now and then. Maybe they won't mind that too much.
Just mix thoroughly dry ground pepper with bird food.
Ground pepper won't affect birds.
I used the pepper numerous times. They ate the birdseed anyway. The pepper didn鈥檛 bother them at all.
I was having a terrible time keeping squirrels off my suet feeder. At first I had it strapped to the trunk of a tree. That was an ad that said to squirrels "come and get it!" Then I tried hanging it. I had to get it high enough that they couldn't jump to it, but then I made the mistake of using binders twine, which has plenty of gripping surface for a squirrel to wrap claws around and just shimmy up and down. I switched to fish line, which I figured squirrels could not get on a grip on and would slide. They saw as the ultimate zip line: they landed hard on the feeder, but I guess the suet was worth the ride and the bump.
But finally I came upon Red Pepper Suet. As mentioned above they just don't like the taste, but birds don't mind it at all.
I haven't had a squirrel on the suet feeder since.
I guess I should have told you what things I've tried so far (that don't work)
Spray the bark of the trees with vinegar (I do this every day especially after it has rained
I hang shiny objects in the apple trees - they take no notice of them, or pull them down and throw them on the ground (beside all the apples they pick, take one bite and throw away)
I bought a large package of cayenne pepper and sprinkled it around the trees and up into the trees in forks of branches, etc. - didn't do a thing. Even had the dog stand guard, but as soon as the dog goes to sleep they do their deed!!
Lots of great comments and tips so far about squirrels, but no one has touched upon keeping them out of my apple trees. They get more apples every year than I do, and I'm getting pretty tired of it. HELP!! Anyone have a solution?
Sorry folks, but I have to agree with several others. There is such a large population using a pellet gun to harvest them, and making stew with the vegetables from the garden is better than them eating them for free. They are also mighty tasty fried after being soaked in buttermilk.
I tried the slinky this summer--worked for a week---they pulled on it enough that it stretched out----now THEY grab the popcorn and laugh!!!