K.H. asks from Kenosha, WI on June 25, 2009
Help with Keeping Bunnies Out of My Garden...
I was wondering if anyone has discovered a natural way to deter bunnies from going into certain areas of my yard/garden. I do not want to hurt the bunnies, in fact I feed them carrots to hopefully fill them up on that stuff and not my growing garden :) My husband and I are first time home owners, and inherited a fairly large garden from the previous owners, so do not know much about gardening and keeping critters away yet. We like the bunnies, but want to keep our veggies. I know they do not like Marigolds, but do they make a spray that smells like Marigolds perhaps that we could spray on our wooden barriers....instead of planting a bunch of Marigolds? We have wooden barriers that was keep out the one docile bunny, but there are 2 new very active bunnies that decided to figure a way to get past the wooden barriers. Thank you in advance for your wisdom :)
3 moms found this helpful
So What Happened?™
So we have successfully kept the bunnies out of the garden, we are still going to experiment, but for now we have not seen any evidence of them. We decided to not use any chemical options, as we were nervous about chemicals going into the soil and potentially into our veggies. But for now we have success, and I thank everyone for sharing of their experience and wisdom :)
More update: We used chicken wire as far as extra barriers around our garden, and it has worked. We were going to try moth balls around the perimeter, or some type of deterrent spray on the wooden dividers around our garden, but read the various ingredients, and warnings, and decided to not even mess with all those chemicals. Thanks for all the help guys!
Featured Answers
N.P. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
you can get special fencing to go around the garden, like chicken wire type but it's green.
or
you can buy this stuff Invisible Fence and spray it on what you don't want them to nibble, but if it's a big area that is hard.
C.T. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
I put tabasco sauce in a spray bottle with some water and spray it on my plants and have no problem.
A.M. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
I have been told that if you put hair in the area it will keep animals out. I am a hair stylist and I have been asked several times for the days worth of hair for people to take home. They say for that very reason the bunnies. So I hope it works.
More Answers
L.H. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
We had the same issue until a momma fox and her kits came to the neighborhood. Her urine did seem to scare them away, or maybe it was her using bunny parts to feed her babies...sorry, that's gross, but I could have killed them myself after all of the damage they did. I have continued with fox urine now, and they are gone.
A.S. answers from Chicago on June 25, 2009
Go buy a bottle of fox urine at BassPro Shop in the camping section. Comes in a spritzer bottle. Spray it around the perimeter of your garden. The bunnies smell it and think that there are fox around. Obviously being a predator of rabbits they stay away.
J.G. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
I have 3 options.
-Take hair from your brush and put it in the garden. Bunnies don't like the human smell.
-use hair my dog has shed since she's put the fear into all the bunnies around our house. They stay away.
-Put some dish soap in the watering can when you water the plants. it doesn't hurt your plants.
Good Luck!
Jenny
B.K. answers from Chicago on June 25, 2009
You can go to your hairdresser and ask for a bag of hair that they've swept up off the floor. You can sprinkle the hair around your garden or around areas that you are trying to protect. It smells like humans and the bunnies will stay away. I used this method on my flowers for the last few years and it worked like a charm. Now we have a family of foxes in the neighborhood and I have not seen one bunny this year. So if the hair doesn't work, you could always get a family of foxes! lol
G.H. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
Close the garden off with chicken wire tall enough to keep them from jumping over and not close enough to the plants that the little critters can eat the leaves. You can step over the fenced part or have hubby build a wire gate. Make sure you feed them in an area the are safe...under my shed is where I put the bunny nibblets.
S.C. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
my mom alway's put out a lawn owl or snakes
M.J. answers from Chicago on June 25, 2009
We used Fox Urine Crystals from Home Depot. They come in a container that you shake.
Also somethings are more tasty to the bunnies. Read up on that.
S.A. answers from Chicago on June 26, 2009
Here are a few that work most of the time:
1.) Old, sifted kitty litter.....has the kitty urine in it, but no poop. The amonia smell of a predator keeps them away.
2.) Cut human hair sprinkled all around.
3.) Make a concoction of a little lemon dish soap, hot sauce, vinegar, and water in a spray bottle....spray plants after each watering. Is time consuming, but it typically works. Good amount of hot sauce in the mix...the soap will help with bugs as well.
All of these have to be reapplied as rain washes them away.
They also make commercial products too, but I've never heard of any working well.
Email