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John McGaw 20-11-2003 03:02 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
"Paul Below" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 00:38:02 GMT, Phisherman wrote:

I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


Could you send some of your deer to Washington State? Here, English
Ivy is a highly invasive plant (it's the Kudzu of the NW) and nothing
seems to eat it.


Hey, when you get done with those deer could you please send them to
Tennessee? I've got at least a half acre of EI that I can't keep under
control and it threatens to pull down some of my trees. EI might just be
worse than kudzu. At least kudzu only grows heavily where there is adequate
sunshine but EI even spreads in dense shade.
--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]

Return address will not work. Please
reply in group or through my website:
http://johnmcgaw.com


J. Del Col 20-11-2003 05:02 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col

Phisherman 20-11-2003 05:05 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
On 20 Nov 2003 07:45:33 -0800, (J. Del Col)
wrote:

Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col



Too much noise (and illegal here), but I'm considering a bow and
arrow.

J. Del Col 20-11-2003 05:22 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col

J. Del Col 20-11-2003 05:32 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col

J. Del Col 20-11-2003 05:42 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col

Phisherman 20-11-2003 06:02 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
On 20 Nov 2003 07:45:33 -0800, (J. Del Col)
wrote:

Phisherman wrote in message . ..
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col



Too much noise (and illegal here), but I'm considering a bow and
arrow.

DavesVideo 20-11-2003 08:08 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
A Winchester would do the trick.


J. Del Col



Too much noise (and illegal here), but I'm considering a bow and
arrow.

With the cooperation of my ajoining neighbors we ended up with about 15 acres
where we allowed a small group to go bow hunting. Each landowner is allowed 3
does in archery season so with husbands and wives each getting 3 permits, we
ended up with 12 plus the ones held by the hunters. They only can get here on
weekends, but so far have killed 9 deer. Since most of the other neighbors are
Bambi huggers, I'm not sure if the hunt is really going to make much of a
difference.

Dave
http://members.tripod.com/~VideoDave

Steve Wolfe 20-11-2003 09:22 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Could you send some of your deer to Washington State? Here, English
Ivy is a highly invasive plant (it's the Kudzu of the NW) and nothing
seems to eat it.


Have you tried goats? : )

steve



Romy Beeck 21-11-2003 05:02 AM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
They make a sprinkler system that gets rid of deer. It works with a censor
ray.My friend bought on and it works great they say.HOPE I HELPS YOU



"Phisherman" wrote in message
...
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.




Vox Humana 21-11-2003 03:04 PM

English ivy eaten by deer
 

"Phisherman" wrote in message
...
I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


I have some on a hillside and I used to have some in pots. The deer don't
bother mine until the very end of winter when food is very scarce. Even
when they do eat it, it always recovers. Considering all the complaints
about EI being invasive, I think the deer may actually be keeping mine under
control.



Dick Adams 24-11-2003 04:02 AM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
"Phisherman" wrote in message

I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.


Two years ago I lined my neighbors garden with habenero peppers. The
result was no rabbits and no deer.

Only humans are dumb enough to eat habeneros.

Dick

P.S.: Best habenero seeds are at www.redsavina.com

Nick 25-11-2003 04:32 AM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Isn't it deer season...?

On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 00:38:02 GMT, Phisherman wrote:

I used plastic berry netting over my English ivy area, held up by 2'
stakes. The deer ate every bit of ivy except the area protected by
the netting. I've tried blood meal, mothballs, tobacco tea, rotten
eggs, Irish spring, and fish emulsion without much success.



DavesVideo 26-11-2003 03:02 AM

English ivy eaten by deer
 
Nick asked:

Isn't it deer season...?


No, it's wabbit season.

Dave
http://members.tripod.com/~VideoDave


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