View Single Post
  #8   Report Post  
Old 03-10-2009, 08:26 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
lloyd lloyd is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2009
Posts: 120
Default Rats and Hedgehogs

On Sat, 3 Oct 2009 19:25:40 +0100, "mark"
wrote:


"lloyd" wrote in message
.. .
On Sat, 3 Oct 2009 18:12:20 +0100, "Christina Websell"
wrote:


"Derek Turner" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 02 Oct 2009 21:22:05 +0100, lloyd wrote:

Anything we can do to encourage the hedgehogs, but not the rats from
visiting the garden? I have both

1. Terrier from working lines.
2. Huge cat.


Yes get some terrier men in.for your rats. Mine come about every six
weeks
to sort them out.
I do have a huge cat, but he's a bit of a wuss about tackling the big ones
with the brown chisel teeth. He sorts out the small ones, no problem, but
those big ones, they're a job for the terriers, he claims ;-)
And he's right. some of the big ones even give the terriers a run for
their
money, antiseptic needed to dab their bleeding noses where they've been
well
bitten by a big rat. They don't seem to mind though, it seems to make
them
more determined..

Tina


That sounds completely horrid. Why should anyone want to kill a rat
just because it's a rat, is that a crime for the poor beast to be a
rat? And if you feel you really must kill them why do it in such a
nasty way! I dread to think what you feel we should do with our feral
children.



They are not just rats though. They are a danger to health


No more so than many other animals or insects such as hedgehogs,
pigeons, flies, deer. In fact the world can be a flilthy place and
much of it down to ourselves. I find washing your hands regularly and
the food preperation surfaces will suffice. Fingers crossed.
The pest control hype continues to rake in billions, I'm surprised we
have not caught on yet.

I don't see how one can complain about rats and yet ignore the other
wildlife and insects. Even the soil with it's natural toxins. We can't
run away from everything. Makes you wonder how we ever got this far
from the trees.