Clare
Joined:
Jul 2020
Posts:
12
Threads:
2
|
|
28-07-2020, 08:09 AM
(This post was last modified: 28-07-2020, 08:10 AM by Clare.)
Suggestions please!! I am an animal lover but hate grey squirrels...so far they have taken all bar 10 apples left on my 60 year old apple tree, eaten my cherries and figs (which i might add were netted) Dug up my little rhubarb plants and used the pots to dust bath in and destroyed 6 squirrel proof bird feeders that we have put extra wire on to stop them breaking in.
To top it off last year I waited and waited for my spring bulbs to bob up and nothing... I waited another month or two thinking maybe they were late coming through, soooo wrong....little grey bleepers had eaten my bulbs and replaced them with 3 well dug in conkers!! not impressed. The nice weather earlier in the year has meant they have been more successful than ever this year, the other day I counted 8 of them frolicking in the garden, I swear they were laughing and flicking the v's at me. They are driving me nuts and I have now resorted to thoughts of an unsavory kind.... https://www.wildmeat.co.uk/blogs/news/sq...uld-try-it
Unfortunately my other half is a real bunny huger and will not even squish the odd fly!! so going down the eating road is not an option, unless i do a chicken surprise dish for him!!
Muah ha ha!!
|
Admin
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
1,894
Threads:
108
|
|
I have heard that chilli flakes helps deter them, true or not, I dont know
|
Veggie
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
14,556
Threads:
606
|
|
I feel your pain, Clare. They've been greedy monsters this year.
They've squeezed through the chicken run wire and pinched Mrs Brown's food, eaten the apples, gnawed the branches........if only they weren't so much fun to watch.! One minute they're one side of the garden and the next they're next door, all without touching the ground. Wish I could do that.
Next door aren't too keen either as one went in their conservatory and ate the parrot's food!
The Moneyless Chicken says:-
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
|
Clare
Joined:
Jul 2020
Posts:
12
Threads:
2
|
|
(28-07-2020, 08:25 AM)Admin Wrote: I have heard that chilli flakes helps deter them, true or not, I dont know Thanks, defo worth a go
|
JJB
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
7,502
Threads:
161
|
|
Get a gun? I haven't found any effective deterrent. Did humanely trap one once but then you have to 'deal' with it as i believe, as they are classed as vermin, you are not permitted to release them elsewhere. Although who would find out is beyond me.
Gardening is an excuse not to do housework
Greetings from Salisbury
Qualified member of the Confused Nutter's Club
|
Small chilli
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
8,540
Threads:
290
|
|
I might be able to supply you with some chilli flakes or powder
I’m with you 100% on the eating them idea. It’s one thing I would actually like to try. Eating them is still definitely an option. Just tell the other half, he’s getting his own bl@@dy tea that night .
Builder that would like to go play in the garden.
|
Veggie
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
14,556
Threads:
606
|
|
(28-07-2020, 10:29 AM)JJB Wrote: Get a gun? I haven't found any effective deterrent. Did humanely trap one once but then you have to 'deal' with it as i believe, as they are classed as vermin, you are not permitted to release them elsewhere. Although who would find out is beyond me. We were overrun with them one year so bought a humane trap. Didn't know about the "vermin" issue so, each time we caught one, we'd take it for a car ride to an isolated part of the woods and release it. We went 5 times one day! Still they kept appearing.
My OH was convinced that the little blighters were running back home before we us so he started spraying a blob of paint on their backs before release! We never saw any Blobbed ones again but we had to stop our trap and release when we were spotted letting one go and told we'd be reported if we came back!
So the pesky things are still here, planting acorns in all the wrong places.
Apropos eating them - BBQd squirrel was on offer at a Garden event i went to years ago. Not for me but a lot of people were tucking in!!
The Moneyless Chicken says:-
Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.
|
PyreneesPlot
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
2,015
Threads:
77
|
|
I would go for the gun and eating option, but then we eat roe deer and wild boar, too. Their numbers are ever increasing because there are no natural predators (wolves are on the way back and we have a few bears), and they are about as far from intensive farming as you can get.
But at least they 'belong' here, unlike grey squirrels in the UK.
A difficult situation.
Has Anyone Seen the Plot?
Hautes-Pyrénées (65), France
|
Curly
Joined:
May 2020
Posts:
102
Threads:
15
|
|
The number of gray squirrels in this area has reduced this year, don't know the reason for this, possibly du to all the trees that were planted several years ago being more mature now or there may be some pine martens moving into the area
|
Clare
Joined:
Jul 2020
Posts:
12
Threads:
2
|
|
(28-07-2020, 10:29 AM)JJB Wrote: Get a gun? I haven't found any effective deterrent. Did humanely trap one once but then you have to 'deal' with it as i believe, as they are classed as vermin, you are not permitted to release them elsewhere. Although who would find out is beyond me. A gun would be top of my list too but i think my neighbours would have something to say about that.
|
The following 1 user Likes Clare's post:1 user Likes Clare's post
• JJB
|