Controlling the Rabbit Population in your Yard
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You said rabbits don't like parsley. Well those cute babies ate both flat leaf & curly leaf parsley! The bed has out of control mint & chives (do they count as onion?). I just stuck an old hunk of hair over the remnant stems. Will see.
Argh! They can be quite the pest! While these are plants that tend to be avoided by rabbits, the little buggers will eat anything if they are hungry enough.
Rabbits do not jump and rabbits do not climb, so a very short 6" fence around your young tender shoots will keep them safe. Once the plants are big enough that the rabbits won't eat them, take the fence down (for ease of weeding, etc) and store until next spring. Small loopey fences are available in Dollar Stores or anywhere garden supplies are sold. No need to put in 4 foot high fences - rabbits are never that tall!!
I have a cat who is indoor-outdoor since adopted from the wild and he is a ferocious hunter. NO mice, voles, rabbits (or squirrels either) in our yard. Plus I have 3 rough collies ("Lassie dogs"). I brush them and leave their fur in clumps in the gardens weighted down by large pebbles. All this seems to deter the bunnies.
I always kept the rabbits out of my garden by doing a row or two around the garden with Marigolds. They don't like the smell an won't eat them. Keeps them from going further into the garden to munch on vegetables.
The rabbits ate ALL of my marigolds last year. They like the New young plants. If you can protect the plants until they get a lot bigger, they don't seem to bother them then.
Giant Hyssop as far as the eye can see! My “go-to” for convincing rabbits and deer to do their shopping elsewhere.
And they are GORGEOUS, smell amazing to humans, self-propagate via prolific seeds (while not being invasive), and the leaves make a nice licorice-scented tea.
The common names of the species are a variety of "hyssops" and "mints"; as a whole the genus is known as giant hyssops or hummingbird mints.
We have returning rabbits each year that dig under the brick wall into our crawl space. They have nibbled on the wood beams, and drive our house dogs crazy with their scent. We filled the burrow holes with quickcrete after they left for the season, but they dug next to it the following year. This year we will be cutting down 30+ year old peony bushes and other shrubs next to our home in order to install chicken wire both horizontally and vertically in our flower beds. I really hope this helps.
Do rabbits love hostas? Each summer I find my hosta leaves cut off with only the stalks left. Their favorite is Small leaved plantain lilly hosta. Could it be slugs?