Fall
Garden Tasks to Protect Your Landscape from Winter Wildlife Damage
by Melinda Myers
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[October 26, 2020]
As the seasons change, we adjust our gardening
tasks and plantings to match. Animals also make changes this time of
year, often changing their eating habits and dining locations. These
adjustments can impact your gardens. Reduce the risk of damage by
starting in fall to protect your landscape from hungry animals this
winter.
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Take a walk around your landscape to evaluate
plants and plantings for their susceptibility to animal damage. Look
for pathways that animals use to access your landscape and areas of
potential damage. Note new plantings, animal favorites and those
special plantings you would hate to lose. Make sure these are
protected.
Check mulch around trees and shrubs. Deep layers of mulch and mulch
piled around the trunk of trees and the base of shrubs provides
shelter for mice and voles. These rodents like to gnaw on the bark
of trees and shrubs in winter. Pull mulch off tree trunks and stems
and spread out deep mulch so it is only two to four inches deep.
Protect young trees and shrubs with a four-feet-tall fence of
hardware cloth sunk several inches into the ground to prevent vole
damage at ground level and most rabbit damage. Mature trees are
usually only bothered during years where the vole and rabbit
populations are high and food is scarce.
Fencing around garden beds filled with animal favorites is another
option. Make sure your fence is high enough, tight to the ground and
gates are secure. You will need a four-feet-high fence for rabbits
and at least five- to six-feet-high fence to keep deer out of small
gardens. A fence of several strands of fishing line has proven to be
successful for some gardeners.
Repellents are another less obtrusive option. These use smell or
taste to discourage animals from dining in your landscape. Check the
label to see if the repellent works on the animals and rodents you
are trying to manage. Apply repellents before animals start feeding
for best results.
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Then reapply as recommended on the label. Look for
one, like organic Plantskydd (plantskydd.com), that is rain and snow
resistant, lasting up to six months on dormant plants over the
winter so you will need to apply it less often.
Scare tactics may be effective depending on where you
live. In urban and suburban areas animals are used to human scents
and sounds. Gardeners often hang old CDs and shiny ribbons in tree
branches to scare hungry animals. If you opt for scare tactics, be
sure to employ a variety of options and change their location to
increase your chance of success.
Constantly monitor and evaluate the effectiveness of the methods
used and check all plantings for damage. When animal populations are
high and hungry, they will eat about anything. Be willing to change
things up if one method is not working. Using multiple tactics will
help increase your level of success.
Protect your landscape from hungry deer, rabbits, and voles this
winter. Start preparing in fall before their winter dining habits
begin. If you are vigilant and persistent, you can coexist with
these creatures and still have a beautiful landscape.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” DVD series and the Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio
segments. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds &
Blooms magazine and was commissioned by Tree World Plant Care for
her expertise to write this article. Her web site is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] |