Caption
Woodchucks or groundhogs can greatly damage a garden.
How to Prevent Groundhogs from Invading Your Garden
Read Next
Gardening Products
More Like This
Comments
Hi, Brandon: Well, this is certainly a narrow topic. NOT. Please see the response to DebB below for some ideas. We are partial to hot red pepper flakes in abundance in such cases, but perhaps one thing you should really consider (besides a dog) is a blanket approach -- trying so many things at once that it just becomes not worth it to be there. We have a similar crawl space. Have you thought about blocking off the crawl space from the basement except for one opening, putting a live trap in the opening, luring it into the crawlspace with corn, and then blocking the outside hole? Otherwise, try lots of things at once: Put nasty stuff in the hole and seal it. Seal off under the deck and around it put sticks that you've smeared with mentholated petroleum jelly. Sprinkle bleach around. Sometimes you can snake black plastic drainage hose through the crawl space to the nest or home and then use it to blow or inject balls of cotton infused with menthol or something else nasty. "Thread" the hose onto long sections of the handle to a snow rake, for example, and then withdraw the pole to leave the hose where you want it. Bear in mind that this is not about preventing the woodchuck from getting into your basement, which you cannot do. It is about getting it to not want to be there in the first place. Good luck!
Hi, Brandon: No need to get them all at once. Put some lettuce pieces, some carrot baby food, and a low bowl of water in your live trap. Make note of when you see the kits and put it out for an hour at that time. Observe if you can, so that you don't get a skunk or possum. It's probably too late for another tactic, which is to use the mom as "bait," although this isn't very humane. You would put the mom in one cage/trap in as comfortable a place/way as possible, then put another live trap with water next to it. The kits will come to the mom, which will make them thirsty, and then perhaps get lured by the water. But depending on how old the kits are, this may be a moot point anyway, if you know what we mean. But thanks for at least trying to do this in a humane way!
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- …
- 10
- Next »




We are partial to hot red pepper flakes in abundance in such cases, but perhaps one thing you should really consider (besides a dog) is a blanket approach -- trying so many things at once that it just becomes not worth it for the groundhog to be there. Try lots of things at once: Put nasty stuff under the porch and seal it. Sprinkle bleach around. Sometimes you can snake black plastic drainage hose under the porch and then use it to blow or inject balls of cotton infused with menthol or something else nasty. "Thread" the hose onto long sections of the handle to a snow rake, for example, and then withdraw the pole to leave the hose where you want it. Bear in mind that this is about getting it to not want to be under there in the first place. Good luck!