
The eastern cottontail rabbit can be a pesky garden companion, so here are tips to help keep him away!
Controlling the Rabbit Population in your Yard
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Disgusting!
Last year I purchased cayanne pepper cheap , where ever I could find it. Dollar Stores etc.
I sprinkled it around and on all my new plants until they were established. I re-applied every time it rained or after watering. It seemed to help tremendously. Lil buggers are leaving evidence now (end of winter as I type this) but as soon as I can get out there , the sprinkling will resume even before I start to plant. Hope this helps someone.
Wrong. These pesky rabbits love creeping phlox. I just planted mine few days ago, they had the most beautiful blooms and this morning..there were all bitten right off. I tried the garlic, pepper spray, with a dash of liquid soap..it seems like it doesn't work.
i've tried chicken wire(they use their heads as a battering ram to get into my garden),sprays,powder. They eat my tomato leaves and pepper plants. Next I'll go broke buying the red pepper and ground them up. As a final cure 22 rifle may be mylast hope .
Yes, I have problems with a wild rabbit...but I have one I rescued, and he's never lived outside...named Petey...and he is quite a character...
I have a Labrador Retriever who finds new rabbits den before I do. She doesn't eat them but tosses them up in the air like a juggler in a circus. I keep an eye open for the building of new nest. One night I a had a bunny clearly starting a nest in my flower bed. I had read somewhere to sprinkle cinnamon around the flower bed to keep rabbits away. It worked. When I went out to sprinkle the cinnamon the rabbit ran away. Once I went back in the house the rabbit came back right to the same area. She sniffed once and ran away.
My wife doesn't want me to kill them, so I tried putting moth balls around my plants. This worked for the wood chuck problem I had, last year. My garden is fenced in, but the little rabbits get in. Any other suggestion are welcome on this.
Bob,
I've read about people using mothballs on a few other sites. Not here to tell you your wrong, but you may want to take a look at this info/article about the chemicals in mothballs. I'm really posting this for others who may consider them as a pest control technique.
https://phoenixpestcontroltn.com/mothballs-dangerous-ineffective/
Just info to consider.
Also see the item below with the subject line “white clover, white clover, send the bunnies right over.” That sounds like a good solution!
Our best advice is above and here: The most effective way of keeping out rabbits is chicken wire fencing. Install a fence that is 4 feet high and bury it 6 inches deep. Bend the top foot of the fence away from the garden like a security fence, so that they can’t climb or jump over it. It’s a bit of work but once it’s done, you’re good for a few years at least. (For new bulbs, try a dome or cage of chicken wire secured over the bed.)
Alternatively, eliminate the bunnies’ habitat. Rabbits don’t like to leave their shelters, so try to reduce the possible rabbit homes around your yard. Brush away piles of brush and leaves, and fill in abandoned burrows. If a rabbit doesn’t have a place to live, hopefully it won’t stay and munch. Rabbits will also breed much more if they have a good habitat available—all the more reason to have no vacancy!
If it’s any consolation, one of our editors has bunnies in her neighborhood, too. They’re cute but they can do some damage.