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Old 22-04-2010, 10:34 PM
ZeroZero ZeroZero is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2010
Posts: 40
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Quote:
Originally Posted by phorbin View Post
In article ,
says...
I think you have 2 choices, either a rabbit or a ground hog. I'd bet on the
rabbit because ground hogs love beans as well as the basics. You need a good
fence.
Steve
"ZeroZero"
wrote in message
...

I have just started gardening after years in a flat/prison.
I have built eight raised beds and planted some brassicas in most of
them. All went well for a couple of weeks and the plants established,
then virtually all the crop dissapeared overnight.
Whatever ate them left the peas and the broad bean plants not to mention
strawberries. It went for the outer leaf parts leaving the stalk part
standing. It did leave the red brassicas - mostly - having a bit of a
nibble, and it seemed to go through all the beds metghodically.

What is it?Pigoens? Mice?
I dont think its slugs its all done in a night..

Is it worth leaving the established but denuded plants or should Ijust
get some new plants?

My guess is the only answer is to cover with old plastic bottles until
the plants get bigger


Around here, groundhogs go for the brassicas first. Rabbits go for
lettuce and then the peas and then the beans.

My bet is on rabbits too because they disappeared 'overnight.'

The more permanent solution is a 1 inch mesh chicken wire fence sunk
into the ground about 6 or so inches with an 'L' bend outward and about
a foot of fence under the ground. Any gate has to follow suit, allow no
gap to get through and have a lintel to attach the chicken wire to go
under the ground. -- Don't be tempted to buy a larger mesh. Young
rabbits can get through larger mesh chicken wire.

I thought groundhogs were North American.


I am guessing pigeons! The pigeons ate all the groundhogs in the UK a long time ago