Birdsonghill
Crowing
Experimentation brings new methods to light! My latest experiments are with deer control with non lethal and non chemical methods. I already know the best method is an expensive seven foot high secure wire and /or electric fence, but I search for less expensive alternatives. The Dewitt co. deer netting is about $120 delivered to me for a little over 300 feet x seven feet tall. It works well if secured at the bottom and no violent storms or accidents with equipment snagging it. It is nearly invisible even close up to me. I have had both problems with high winds blowing limbs through and destroying the fence and my tractor wheel catching the fabric mowing grass$$. A large buck busted through and tore down a side when he got hung up on his antlers, but I was able to put it back up. It worked perfectly a couple years and failed a couple years, multiple times. It will last and be reusable with care and luck , for a few years. 50/50 for me. It is a bit too light and invisible I think to stand up to the rigors of field use. If it gets heavier it will likely go up in cost. Doing nothing here means a total destruction of any melon, pea or corn crop. They eat the apples and other fruit off all the unprotected trees to about seven feet above the ground level around here. All the deep freezers around here are full of venison but the herds thrive. I don't hunt anymore. but am not opposed to it or accepting gifts of venison. The fruit and garden fed deer are delicious and nutritious! Anyway my neighbor found some construction site orange plastic webbing like net that is substantial and looks like it may hold up well. It is only six feet tall however, and that is too low ,I think. I have tried a lot of old timers tales of remedies such as pouches /sachets of human hair around the garden fence, urinating around the gardens perimeter, using predator urine sachets, scare crows and solar motion sensor lights. They did not perform well for me. The deer seem to appreciate the solar lights helping them see their dinner better. Any more suggestions, of inexpensive, non lethal control methods for keeping deer out of the melon patch?