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#1
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Damn mice
Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a
sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#2
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Damn mice
In article , "Bob Hobden" writes: | | Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a | sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. | Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Why are you blaming mice? I have had over a 50% failure rate on broad beans, though SOME of those may recover. This is some kind of rot that hits germinating peas and beans in my garden. I have had a 95% failure rate on dwarf beans and an 80% one on peas in the past. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#3
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Damn mice
"Nick Maclaren" wrote .. "Bob Hobden" writes: | | Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a | sign of any others I have had over a 50% failure rate on broad beans, ... I have had a 95% failure rate on dwarf beans and an 80% one on peas in the past. I sowed dwarf beans in pots indoors, and only 6 out of 36 germinated. I've also had to re-sow all my peas (in gutters) as only a few germinated. Don't know what the problem is this year, but it's definitely not mice. Second sowing of peas are okay; still waiting on the dwarf beans. |
#4
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Damn mice
Sowed peas direct into soil but placed net over immediately and no problems
to date. -- Baal I smile and go off waving (Amiably) - for that's my way "Melanie" wrote in message ... "Nick Maclaren" wrote .. "Bob Hobden" writes: | | Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a | sign of any others I have had over a 50% failure rate on broad beans, ... I have had a 95% failure rate on dwarf beans and an 80% one on peas in the past. I sowed dwarf beans in pots indoors, and only 6 out of 36 germinated. I've also had to re-sow all my peas (in gutters) as only a few germinated. Don't know what the problem is this year, but it's definitely not mice. Second sowing of peas are okay; still waiting on the dwarf beans. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#5
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Damn mice
"Baal" wrote Sowed peas direct into soil but placed net over immediately and no problems to date. That must be quite a fine net to stop mice, and presumably made of wire as they chew through plastic netting? -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#6
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Damn mice
"Nick Maclaren" wrote ... after "Bob Hobden" moaned: | | Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a | sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. | Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Why are you blaming mice? I have had over a 50% failure rate on broad beans, though SOME of those may recover. This is some kind of rot that hits germinating peas and beans in my garden. I have had a 95% failure rate on dwarf beans and an 80% one on peas in the past. Little holes where peas should be, signs of digging, lots of mice about, no peas in the ground when I've looked. -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#7
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Damn mice
"Bob Hobden" wrote in message ... Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Tiny little land mines? I am not sure white spirit would leave the seeds viable anyway would it? I have never had a mouse/pea seed problem but would think a less drastic cover up smell such as maybe a spray of air freshener along the drill before covering the seeds might work. -- Chris, West Cork, Ireland. |
#8
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Damn mice
On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 14:42:59 +0100, "Cerumen"
wrote: Tiny little land mines? Squash them with your mighty killfile! |
#9
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Damn mice
"Cerumen" wrote after "Bob Hobden" moaned... Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Tiny little land mines? I am not sure white spirit would leave the seeds viable anyway would it? I have never had a mouse/pea seed problem but would think a less drastic cover up smell such as maybe a spray of air freshener along the drill before covering the seeds might work. The White Spirit seemed to work last year for the second sowing after the little blighters did for the first sowing but it's had no effect this year. We haven't had a problem like this until we moved to this site where there are no cats in the area, a neighbour on our last site had 27 some of which were always to be seen mousing on the site so certainly no mice or rabbit problem there. As someone else suggests, I think we may try fine wire netting over the seeds and see how it goes. -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#10
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Damn mice
"Bob Hobden" wrote in message ... "Cerumen" wrote after "Bob Hobden" moaned... Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Tiny little land mines? I am not sure white spirit would leave the seeds viable anyway would it? I have never had a mouse/pea seed problem but would think a less drastic cover up smell such as maybe a spray of air freshener along the drill before covering the seeds might work. The White Spirit seemed to work last year for the second sowing after the little blighters did for the first sowing but it's had no effect this year. We haven't had a problem like this until we moved to this site where there are no cats in the area, a neighbour on our last site had 27 some of which were always to be seen mousing on the site so certainly no mice or rabbit problem there. As someone else suggests, I think we may try fine wire netting over the seeds and see how it goes. I don't think white spirit will work, since it evaporates quite quickly, leaving not much trace. Wire netting prolly won't work because the varmints mine from underground. We always use paraffin for our peas, and our allotment has all the varmints one would not want: mice, voles, fieldmice, moles, rats, and rabbits. Soaking the peas in paraffin for a day before planting doesn't seem to harm their germination rate but it does discourage the varmints. Paraffin costs about £4 for 3 litres, so you need to find some friends to share it with, since you'll only need a half cup to soak your peas and broad beans in. s. |
#11
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Damn mice
"Bob Hobden" wrote in message ... "Cerumen" wrote after "Bob Hobden" moaned... Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Tiny little land mines? I am not sure white spirit would leave the seeds viable anyway would it? I have never had a mouse/pea seed problem but would think a less drastic cover up smell such as maybe a spray of air freshener along the drill before covering the seeds might work. The White Spirit seemed to work last year for the second sowing after the little blighters did for the first sowing but it's had no effect this year. We haven't had a problem like this until we moved to this site where there are no cats in the area, a neighbour on our last site had 27 some of which were always to be seen mousing on the site so certainly no mice or rabbit problem there. As someone else suggests, I think we may try fine wire netting over the seeds and see how it goes. Why not try sowing the peas in trays in the greenhouse and when they are sprouting plant them out? -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#12
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Damn mice
"Alan Holmes" wrote after "Bob Hobden" wrote "Cerumen" wrote after "Bob Hobden" moaned... Planted two rows of early peas and only one single plant has come up, not a sign of any others and I soaked them in White Spirit before planting. Anyone got any good anti-mice advice that has worked for them? Tiny little land mines? I am not sure white spirit would leave the seeds viable anyway would it? I have never had a mouse/pea seed problem but would think a less drastic cover up smell such as maybe a spray of air freshener along the drill before covering the seeds might work. The White Spirit seemed to work last year for the second sowing after the little blighters did for the first sowing but it's had no effect this year. We haven't had a problem like this until we moved to this site where there are no cats in the area, a neighbour on our last site had 27 some of which were always to be seen mousing on the site so certainly no mice or rabbit problem there. As someone else suggests, I think we may try fine wire netting over the seeds and see how it goes. Why not try sowing the peas in trays in the greenhouse and when they are sprouting plant them out? Ours isn't big enough what with all the other stuff that has to be in there. -- Regards Bob H 17mls W. of London.UK |
#13
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Damn mice
Mice and rats love a mixture of rat poison and peanut butter. Hide it so
that other animals cannot get it. Geoff |
#14
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Damn mice
Geoff wrote:
Mice and rats love a mixture of rat poison and peanut butter. Hide it so that other animals cannot get it. Geoff Having had severe mice problems I purchased cheap mouse traps, bated them with peanut butter. Placed 4 traps around the problem area, caught 4 a day for the first few days, then numbers reduced to none over a couple of weeks. This has certainly worked for me, especially the latest infestation which were eating my purple sprouting broccoli! I have also used white spirit, never thought about the fast evaporation rate, I will try paraffin the next sowing. |
#15
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Damn mice
Broadback wrote in
: Geoff wrote: Mice and rats love a mixture of rat poison and peanut butter. Hide it so that other animals cannot get it. Geoff Having had severe mice problems I purchased cheap mouse traps, bated them with peanut butter. Placed 4 traps around the problem area, caught 4 a day for the first few days, then numbers reduced to none over a couple of weeks. This has certainly worked for me, especially the latest infestation which were eating my purple sprouting broccoli! I have also used white spirit, never thought about the fast evaporation rate, I will try paraffin the next sowing. Are we allowed to do this for cats? If not, why not? -- Tunku "Caution : traces of irony and other metallic objects may be present in the above post" |
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