View Single Post
  #7   Report Post  
Old 01-04-2005, 04:40 AM
PeteGibbons
 
Posts: n/a
Default

excellent info, thanks...

Pete

"ToolGRL" wrote in message
...
http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7439.html

found this hope it helps
Dawn

"Steveo" wrote in message
...
"PeteGibbons" wrote:
Thanks, but we're not talking about moles. We're talking about

voles.
They eat grass roots, etc. and live just through the winter under the
snow on top of, and just under your lawn. My lawn doesn't have a few
tunnels, its completely trashed. I'll post a link to a pic in a day

or
two... I'm probably going to have to resod the thing almost entirely,
and I've got about 3500 sq ft back there! What I want to know is how

to
get rid of the voles that are still there (are they? how can I tell?)
and prevent this from happening next year...

"Steveo" wrote in message
...
"PeteGibbons" wrote:
I hope you get a response, I'm in the same boat. I just got home

and
saw
my back yard, a 10ft by 10ft area where the snow has melted is
friggin trashed. And thats only what Ive seen so far. What do I

do?

"CanadianCowboy" wrote in

message
.. .
What do I do ?

I assume I get rid of the voles first but how do have they

burrowed
?

Do I just re-seed ?

Any help would be greatly appreciated !

If you're talking about moles, it's not unusual to find tunnels in
your lawn after the snow melts. The mole gets hard up for food in
the dead of winter and goes scrounging under your turf in search
of grubs, earthworms etc. Most times as the weather warms and food
becomes easier to find, they will leave your lawn and head to the
nearest wooded area.

If you see the tunneling continue to spread after the weather has
stayed warm for a few weeks, you may have to either attempt to
eliminate their food source with a control/kill strength grub

control
application. (not a grub preventer treatment)

Traps are the only real way to kill the mole itself. Those sonic

toys
that claim to chase them away are nothing more than snake oil.

Traps (just like moles) or Rodenticide.