Deer damaged lawn
Christopher Sgroi
4 years ago
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tsugajunkie z5 SE WI ♱
4 years agodchall_san_antonio
4 years agoRelated Discussions
deer damage to old teas
Comments (5)My roses are all in infancy only 1-2 years old, however roses like Gertrude Jekyll are about 6' tall while the teas are 3' and below. I had many that were eaten by gophers and out of 30 I have lost only 2 after burying them deeply to allow own roots to grow on the advice of compatriots here. I now make individual cages for the roses out of 2" chicken wire until they are huge and a little munching won't matter. And I bury them in 10-15 gallon pots. I now have a vole which eats them off on TOP of the ground. I'm hoping something eats it. What made me the maddest is not the excessive damage to the roses but that the deer wait till the bud is about a day away from opening THEN they eat it....See MoreHow to tell the difference between rabbit and deer damage?
Comments (22)mxk3(Zone 5b SE MI) Noticed more damage this morning - they got hold of my "Fama" scabiosa (which was blooming beautifully - Ugh!) and my newly-purchased "Samobor" geraniums, which were still in pots. -------------------------------------- Yes imagine my surprise when they ate my geraniums. They are suppose to be deer resistant. They could not resist....See MoreHow to tell the difference between canker and deer/other damage?
Comments (5)That link was great, thanks! That looks exactly like what I'm seeing. Any idea if you can scrape back to healthy wood using a sharp sterilized pruning knife with this form of canker to save trunks/large branches? I wonder if this is more of a younger tree issue. One thing about this region is that there are old, abandoned apple trees everywhere around here. I've gone up and inspected some of these over the years. They haven't had any human intervention in possibly decades, yet continue to produce abundantly and never seem to have any major physiological issues, if any. Makes you think....See MoreDeer or rabbit damage?
Comments (16)We alternate sprays, sometimes Liquid Fence, sometimes I Must Garden Spice Scented Deer Repellent. We have both daylilies and hostas. Deer love daylily buds more than they love hostas. When the daylily buds form we spray at least twice a week since you can't miss a bud or else it may be gone. We have found that after a month or so we have to switch sprays. We buy both in the concentrate. One more thing, we have never found a large sprayer that doesn't clog up with deer repellent. I've ordered them from A M Leonard and elsewhere and haven't found a large one that works well with the repellent. We haven't noticed any issue with storing them over winter. We've had deer eat rhododendron leaves. They will eat just about anything that isn't prickly--this past winter they were munching on a large taxus capitata....See Morefunctionthenlook
4 years agoChristopher Sgroi
4 years agotsugajunkie z5 SE WI ♱
4 years agofunctionthenlook
4 years agodchall_san_antonio
4 years agoChristopher Sgroi
4 years agoarmoured
4 years agoChristopher Sgroi
4 years agomorpheuspa (6B/7A, E. PA)
4 years ago
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