Search
Latest topics
» Happy Birthday!!by Scorpio Rising Today at 7:21 am
» N & C Midwest: Nov. Dec. 2024
by Scorpio Rising Yesterday at 8:23 pm
» Butterbaby Hybrid Squash (Butternut)
by Scorpio Rising Yesterday at 8:19 pm
» Indoor Lighting for Kitchen Herbs & Lettuce
by OhioGardener 11/22/2024, 6:58 pm
» Catalog season has begun!
by OhioGardener 11/22/2024, 3:35 pm
» Interesting Marketing for Compost
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 7:29 pm
» How does green turn to brown?
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 4:58 pm
» Ohio Gardener's Greenhouse
by OhioGardener 11/21/2024, 12:16 pm
» Tree roots, yeeessss.....
by sanderson 11/20/2024, 2:21 am
» The SFG Journey-Biowash
by has55 11/19/2024, 7:37 pm
» What are you eating from your garden today?
by OhioGardener 11/19/2024, 8:27 am
» Cooked worms?
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/19/2024, 1:04 am
» New SFG gardener in Auckland
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/16/2024, 11:25 pm
» Kiwi's SFG Adventure
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/12/2024, 7:10 pm
» Thanksgiving Cactus
by OhioGardener 11/12/2024, 5:40 pm
» Need Garden Layout Feedback
by markqz 11/9/2024, 9:16 pm
» Thai Basil
by Scorpio Rising 11/8/2024, 8:52 pm
» How best to keep a fallow SFG bed
by KiwiSFGnewbie 11/8/2024, 8:11 pm
» Preserving A Bumper Tomato Harvest with Freezing vs Canning
by plantoid 11/7/2024, 11:36 am
» Mark's first SFG
by sanderson 11/6/2024, 11:51 pm
» What Have You Picked From Your Garden Today
by OhioGardener 11/5/2024, 2:29 pm
» Greetings from Southeastern Wisconsin
by sanderson 11/5/2024, 2:01 pm
» Spinning Compost Bin-need some ideas
by rtfm 11/2/2024, 7:49 pm
» Growing fruit trees in Auckland
by OhioGardener 10/31/2024, 4:23 pm
» Vermiculite -- shipping sale through 10/31/2024
by markqz 10/30/2024, 2:27 pm
» N & C Midwest: October 2024
by Scorpio Rising 10/30/2024, 10:38 am
» Old Mulch and Closing Beds for Winter
by sanderson 10/26/2024, 11:00 pm
» Hello from Land of Umpqua, Oregon Zone 8b
by sanderson 10/25/2024, 3:14 pm
» Hello everyone!
by SFGHQSTAFF 10/24/2024, 3:22 pm
» Senior Gardeners
by sanderson 10/23/2024, 6:09 pm
Google
Name this vermin...
+19
martha
Megan
Wyldflower
Ha-v-v
cansaskgard
camprn
jenjehle
jinx
mckr3441
jillschmill
ander217
LaFee
johnfromfl
jtwenting
Finch
milaneyjane
dmpower
chocolatepop
Squat_Johnson
23 posters
Page 1 of 2
Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Name this vermin...
I have some kind of vermin. Help me figure out what it is and what to do... I have had some mole activity, but not sure if this is related. I found a nest of sorts under the ground. It had hay, mulch and chewed up weed cloth in it.
Symptoms: Tomato plants completely disappear under the ground.
Broccoli roots completely eaten below the surface (some peppers too).
Potato plants died very early. I dug up all my potatoes. This is all I got from 16 squares.
I am in Kentucky, 6a. Help would be appreciated.
Squat_Johnson- Posts : 440
Join date : 2010-05-25
Location : Beaver Dam, Kentucky, zone 6a
Re: Name this vermin...
Not a groundhog. There are some tunnels though.
Squat_Johnson- Posts : 440
Join date : 2010-05-25
Location : Beaver Dam, Kentucky, zone 6a
Re: Name this vermin...
First I would like to say how sorry I am for your crop loss. I am spending far too much of my time watching my potato plants, and would be devastated if my crop was taken over.
While I would blame a mole for many things, I don't think they have the jaw structure to damage a potato the way yours seem to be damaged. I live in 5b - central Indiana, and the moles here are nothing like the moles I came in contact with in Toronto. The locals are the size of small cats and can move a great deal of earth. That being said, most of a moles damage to a garden is to the displacement of root systems while it is moving the earth to look for insects. As far as I know most moles are strict insectivores with the exception of the Townsend mole. It lives in N. California and in S British Columbia.
I'm guessing a different rodent left this mess for you - sorry
While I would blame a mole for many things, I don't think they have the jaw structure to damage a potato the way yours seem to be damaged. I live in 5b - central Indiana, and the moles here are nothing like the moles I came in contact with in Toronto. The locals are the size of small cats and can move a great deal of earth. That being said, most of a moles damage to a garden is to the displacement of root systems while it is moving the earth to look for insects. As far as I know most moles are strict insectivores with the exception of the Townsend mole. It lives in N. California and in S British Columbia.
I'm guessing a different rodent left this mess for you - sorry
dmpower- Posts : 82
Join date : 2010-04-06
Location : 5b Bloomington Indiana
Re: Name this vermin...
That would be voles that you have. Nasty creatures!
milaneyjane- Posts : 422
Join date : 2010-03-18
Location : MN Zone 4
Re: Name this vermin...
If you staple 1/4 inch hardware cloth to the bottom of your boxes it would help greatly!!!!!! Be warned it is a timely and expensive project. It took me days with the help of a neighbor to do my boxes.
milaneyjane- Posts : 422
Join date : 2010-03-18
Location : MN Zone 4
Re: Name this vermin...
How irritating! I have two big corn snakes hanging out in my yard and I'd bring one over to you if I could. I'm not familiar with voles. Can cats get them?
Finch- Posts : 17
Join date : 2010-05-17
Location : Chattanooga
Re: Name this vermin...
After some research and talking, I agree. I think everyone around here calls these little @$#%^s field mice. I had dinner with family and walked back by my garden and there were three holes in the ground where I left my empty potato patch. I baited four victory mouse traps with peanut butter, watered the plants and called it a day. Wish me luck.
BTW, there was another dead broccoli plant.
A corn snake is sounding like a good idea.
BTW, there was another dead broccoli plant.
A corn snake is sounding like a good idea.
Squat_Johnson- Posts : 440
Join date : 2010-05-25
Location : Beaver Dam, Kentucky, zone 6a
Re: Name this vermin...
If you have other garden visitors that you don't want to see hurt, you might want to put a box or some other covering over the trap, but leave a hole big enough for only the vermin you want to catch. You don't want your cat, or your children getting in trouble.
Just a thought since I told a friend to set out a trap for her chippies, but caught her favorite squirrel.
good luck!!
Just a thought since I told a friend to set out a trap for her chippies, but caught her favorite squirrel.
good luck!!
dmpower- Posts : 82
Join date : 2010-04-06
Location : 5b Bloomington Indiana
Re: Name this vermin...
Not moles. Moles are carniverous, eating mostly worms and grubs.
I guess one could accidentally dig into a tater, but not at this scale
Mice, rabbits, maybe even rats, are possible.
I guess one could accidentally dig into a tater, but not at this scale
Mice, rabbits, maybe even rats, are possible.
jtwenting- Posts : 42
Join date : 2010-05-18
Location : Netherlands
Re: Name this vermin...
Finch wrote:How irritating! I have two big corn snakes hanging out in my yard and I'd bring one over to you if I could. I'm not familiar with voles. Can cats get them?
Cats can destroy a small tree with their urine. I had a 4 foot tall citrus tree that was killed by a cat.
As far as the potato's it looks like mice/field rats to me. I'll have to read up on the voles. I do have some problems with toads and frogs digging in the soil. Since they are carnivores, I let them go. we can co-exist with toads.
A tip about frogs and snakes:
We have a garden radio show that originates from Orlando, Fl. Someone called in a few years ago and said there were frogs in their toilet. I wrote and told them to put a screen over the vent on the roof. Frogs and snakes will climb into the vent and may frighten some people when the critters appear in the house. Use wire screen and a hose clamp to fasten it to the roof vent. Not many roof vents are covered.
johnfromfl- Posts : 61
Join date : 2010-04-17
Age : 76
Location : Corning, New York
Re: Name this vermin...
The frogs in my Florida toilet came from a sewer drain between us and the street (happily, on the county's side of the line!) that was broken by the roots of the neighbor's live oak tree.
It was months before we quit finding frogs in the toilet and the sinks! (Good news...there weren't that many -- a half-dozen or so, and they were mostly young leopard frogs...so not terribly high on the ick scale, but unnerving at 3 am...!!!)
It was months before we quit finding frogs in the toilet and the sinks! (Good news...there weren't that many -- a half-dozen or so, and they were mostly young leopard frogs...so not terribly high on the ick scale, but unnerving at 3 am...!!!)
LaFee- Posts : 1022
Join date : 2010-03-03
Location : West Central Florida
Re: Name this vermin...
OK, out of a dozen Victory mouse traps and peanut butter, I got no hits the first night.
This evening I am going to dig up my white potatoes and am thinking about turning my mom's Chihuahua loose on them. (The voles, not the potatoes ).
This evening I am going to dig up my white potatoes and am thinking about turning my mom's Chihuahua loose on them. (The voles, not the potatoes ).
Squat_Johnson- Posts : 440
Join date : 2010-05-25
Location : Beaver Dam, Kentucky, zone 6a
And Survey Says: Vole or Field Mouse...
Voles or Field Mouse... Same difference. Very big teeth. I have caught two 4" long very fat voles. They like peanut butter a lot, but not so much the Victory mouse traps.
I will likely plant broccoli in the empty place after eating my first serving this very evening. Wow.
Squat_Johnson- Posts : 440
Join date : 2010-05-25
Location : Beaver Dam, Kentucky, zone 6a
Voles
You have my total and complete sympathy. I had a thread about these little monsters a few weeks ago. I've lived in southeast MO all my life and have never seen a vole infestation like we've had this year. They got half of our corn, half of our peas, a third of our potatoes, half of our sweet potatoes - we'd look at the sweet potatoes in the morning and all were there, then by afternoon there would be two or three holes where the plants had been that morning. My husband actually saw a corn plant going down through their tunnel one day.
There were a lot of different remedies suggested on the other thread and I tried most of them. We tried flooding them out with a water hose, but their runs were so extensive I don't think it did any good. We tried moving the straw mulch, but it didn't seem to matter to them. We pressed down every mole and vole run we found since voles also use mole runs. We purchased a gizmo at a garden center that runs on batteries, and is stuck in the ground. It emits a beep every few seconds. It said it would take up to two weeks to clear them out. I'm not sure if it finally worked or not. About two and a half weeks after putting it in place the voles seem to have finally cleared out, but I also have a cat who started sleeping in the garden, and one day I saw a huge black snake going down one of their holes. Our dogs were also digging them out of my herb garden and asparagus patch, and from beneath my yucca plants.
I phoned our local extension office and the garden expert there told me to buy Havoc at our local farm store and put the poison in the tunnels. It makes them slowly bleed to death. I was too afraid it would affect other animals and we didn't try it, but when we checked on its availability the store clerk said his neighbor got rid of his voles by putting ramen noodles in their tunnels. He claimed they would eat the dried noodles, and the noodles would swell up inside and kill them. We tried that, but by the time we put the noodles in the runs the voles had suddenly disappeared.
I'm guessing the snake had more to do with it than anything, but it could have been the beeper, the cat, or a combination of everything.
The extension expert told me they can also kill fruit trees and shrubs by either riddling the bark, or eating the roots. That probably explains the two fruit trees we lost last year.
Good luck in getting rid of them. They can devastate a garden in just a couple of weeks. I wish I knew what finally did the trick for us, but all I can say is, "Good riddance to them, and I hope they never come back."
There were a lot of different remedies suggested on the other thread and I tried most of them. We tried flooding them out with a water hose, but their runs were so extensive I don't think it did any good. We tried moving the straw mulch, but it didn't seem to matter to them. We pressed down every mole and vole run we found since voles also use mole runs. We purchased a gizmo at a garden center that runs on batteries, and is stuck in the ground. It emits a beep every few seconds. It said it would take up to two weeks to clear them out. I'm not sure if it finally worked or not. About two and a half weeks after putting it in place the voles seem to have finally cleared out, but I also have a cat who started sleeping in the garden, and one day I saw a huge black snake going down one of their holes. Our dogs were also digging them out of my herb garden and asparagus patch, and from beneath my yucca plants.
I phoned our local extension office and the garden expert there told me to buy Havoc at our local farm store and put the poison in the tunnels. It makes them slowly bleed to death. I was too afraid it would affect other animals and we didn't try it, but when we checked on its availability the store clerk said his neighbor got rid of his voles by putting ramen noodles in their tunnels. He claimed they would eat the dried noodles, and the noodles would swell up inside and kill them. We tried that, but by the time we put the noodles in the runs the voles had suddenly disappeared.
I'm guessing the snake had more to do with it than anything, but it could have been the beeper, the cat, or a combination of everything.
The extension expert told me they can also kill fruit trees and shrubs by either riddling the bark, or eating the roots. That probably explains the two fruit trees we lost last year.
Good luck in getting rid of them. They can devastate a garden in just a couple of weeks. I wish I knew what finally did the trick for us, but all I can say is, "Good riddance to them, and I hope they never come back."
ander217- Posts : 1450
Join date : 2010-03-16
Age : 69
Location : Southeastern Missouri (6b)
One more thing
Oh yeah, I forgot to mention we tried the Victory mouse traps, too, baited with peanut butter. They pulled the trap completely underground and ate the peanut butter without springing the trap. I barely saw one corner of the trap visible down a run or I would never have known what happened to it.
As you stated, our extension agent said they are also called field mice and meadow mice, but they aren't really mice. There are pine voles that prefer forests and two other kinds I've now forgotten, but they all like to overwinter where they have plenty of cover such as pine needles, field crop residues, dead grass, etc.
As you stated, our extension agent said they are also called field mice and meadow mice, but they aren't really mice. There are pine voles that prefer forests and two other kinds I've now forgotten, but they all like to overwinter where they have plenty of cover such as pine needles, field crop residues, dead grass, etc.
ander217- Posts : 1450
Join date : 2010-03-16
Age : 69
Location : Southeastern Missouri (6b)
Re: Name this vermin...
The poison will kill anything that ingests is, including (if the dose is high enough, which isn't high at all) humans.
We used to use it on moles here (no voles around) until the sale was outlawed (and even then, until out supplies ran out, we had some left).
Highly effective, but have to be careful.
Best way in our experience (but that's because moles are carnivores) was to dig up some earthworms, cut them in half, coat them in the poison, and drop in the runs.
Moles eat the dying worms, ingest a lethal dose underground, and die quickly.
We used to use it on moles here (no voles around) until the sale was outlawed (and even then, until out supplies ran out, we had some left).
Highly effective, but have to be careful.
Best way in our experience (but that's because moles are carnivores) was to dig up some earthworms, cut them in half, coat them in the poison, and drop in the runs.
Moles eat the dying worms, ingest a lethal dose underground, and die quickly.
jtwenting- Posts : 42
Join date : 2010-05-18
Location : Netherlands
Re: Name this vermin...
I've had voles, too, and posted about them in another thread. The tricky part is, I didn't have any trouble last year, so didn't do anything different to my box, but this year, they have been at my garden. I called a pest control company and they put out some traps, though honestly, they told me that until there isn't anything else for them to eat (read: ALL MY VEGETATION), they won't go for what is in the traps! It sounds like there isn't much help until we get to fall/winter (I'm in Missouri).
The best idea is to put that small-squared garden mesh under the box, but it's a huge pain once you've planted, I'm sure. I built a cage OVER my SFG, to keep out squirrels and bunnies, but have just given up on the voles this year. Next year, I will add the garden mesh underneath.
The best idea is to put that small-squared garden mesh under the box, but it's a huge pain once you've planted, I'm sure. I built a cage OVER my SFG, to keep out squirrels and bunnies, but have just given up on the voles this year. Next year, I will add the garden mesh underneath.
jillschmill- Posts : 27
Join date : 2010-04-10
Location : St. Louis
Re: Name this vermin...
Get hardware cloth and staple it to the bottom of the box. Yes, it's a pain to empty the box but a bigger pain when all the veggies disappear.
You have my sympathy.
Claire
You have my sympathy.
Claire
mckr3441
Certified SFG Instructor- Posts : 759
Join date : 2010-03-05
Age : 84
Location : Cleveland Heights, Ohio (5b)
Research came across...
I've been researching my garden pests (thinking fungus, aphids or ear wigs) and came across a website for home remedies for a the most common garden pests that included:
"You can repel moles, gophers, ground squirrels
(Figure 9), and marmots by placing jalapeño
peppers within 4 inches of where they are
invading."
You can see the whole list here:
http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/pdf/ec/ec1586.pdf
"You can repel moles, gophers, ground squirrels
(Figure 9), and marmots by placing jalapeño
peppers within 4 inches of where they are
invading."
You can see the whole list here:
http://extension.oregonstate.edu/catalog/pdf/ec/ec1586.pdf
jinx- Posts : 99
Join date : 2010-03-02
Age : 51
Location : Northern Davis County, UT
I mean business!
Ok, just got done putting out about 2 dozen jalapeno's and set out 8 D-Con Blocks. And my husband bought me a 4 pack of Victory Traps. Going to put those out tonight. Not sure what, if anything, will work, but I'm not messing around. My garden is the fruit of my labor and I will not go down easy! My plants are beautiful and just starting to flower. No way will I let those little good-for-nothing rodents destroy all that I've done.
Sorry, I get a little worked up.
I am out there a lot and haven't SEEN any of these voles, but the new tunnels are always there in the morning. So I'm assuming they come out more at night when it's cooler.
Wish me luck!
Sorry, I get a little worked up.
I am out there a lot and haven't SEEN any of these voles, but the new tunnels are always there in the morning. So I'm assuming they come out more at night when it's cooler.
Wish me luck!
Re: Name this vermin...
jenjehle wrote:Ok, just got done putting out about 2 dozen jalapeno's and set out 8 D-Con Blocks.
I knew this stuff was toxic for animals but my gardens are outside of our fence on my side yard in the front. My dogs almost NEVER go over there.
Well, my little dachshund somehow squeezed under the privacy fence and got into the gardens. She either ate a D-Con bait or ate a vole that died after eating one, and passed away yesterday.
My family is so sad. Esp my kids; they are heart broken. She was such a sweet, onery little thing. It was awful to know she died b/c of something I did. I feel so bad. Wish I could go back and do things differently.
We all miss her so much!
Here's my youngest boy holding her just a few weeks ago:
Re: Name this vermin...
I am sooooo sorrry for your loss....
cansaskgard- Posts : 48
Join date : 2010-05-26
Age : 52
Location : Zone 2b: Martensville, Saskatchewan, Canada
Re: Name this vermin...
I am so sorry for you and the family !!
Ha-v-v- Posts : 1119
Join date : 2010-03-12
Age : 64
Location : Southwest Ms. Zone 8A (I like to think I get a little bit of Zone 9 too )
Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Page 1 of 2
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum