What do squirrels want?
Not my bulbs, it seems. I am finding holes dug by the furry rodents all over the place but none of them are really deep enough to displace a bulb, and I am not seeing bulb remnants anywhere. Snarky Vegan tweeted that they need to bury food everywhere because they can’t smell it. I believe her.
But still, it’s annoying. I need the bulbs to remain adequately covered by soil. This is surely the year of the squirrel on the GWI property. They’re always around. They seem totally at home on the patio during the summer, darting between the pond and the rose/lily bed all the time. I tolerate them, but do not want them digging up my bulbs, even by accident. So this is what I’ve tried:
Red pepper: seems to work, somewhat, but requires constant reapplication.
Critter Ridder spray: complete waste of money.
Peony grids over beds: works somewhat. Chicken wire would likely be better, but I really prefer this stuff on pots. Ground needs to be free. I don’t want chicken wire embedded all over the place.
Various disgustingly smelly Liquid Fence products: great for deer I'm assuming, but not for squirrels. AH! The bad sense of smell! (I do catch on.)
Many wooden skewers stuck into the ground, point side up: you’d think this would work. I have readily stabbed myself with these things while working around them, but I am not totally sure they deter.
I just want them to stop digging. But that’s not what they want.
(The image above is my pond, closed for the season. You can also see the only type of squirrel I like.)
Comments
I have a love-hate relationship with my squirrels. When you get this figured out, I'm all ears.
I relocated 17 in the spring. It became a lot of work and then I wondered what ills I was causing the folks bordering the park.
H.
Those squirrels have no shame -- they dug up my azalea seedling and dragged it out of its whole on the off chance that I might have put some squirrel food in the hole while I was planting.