WARNING: Squirrel death ahead... Read or not, your choice.
Yeah, it was one of the Bad Grove Gang, at least from the direction it entered the live trap. I baited the center release lever with a smear of peanut butter, but I also placed a small dab on both ends assuming it would lick that off before going for the large smear. So I know the direction it came from. It has gone to Happy Squirrel Acorn Acres...
Peanut butter works...
I don't really want to kill any animals. I stopped hunting 40 years ago because causing unnecessary pain seemed wrong. If the squirrels had limited their hunger to fallen sunflower seeds and acorns, I would have just admired their antics and left them alone. I even forgave them stealing all my apples. I didn't spray the apples so none were ever really worth eating anyway. When they started taking my heirloom tomatoes last year I got angry about it. But when they wouldn't even leave bean, corn, and cucumber seedlings to grow this year, I drew the line. I have a right to a garden.
I have read many websites about the lack of success of relocating squirrels and humane killing methods. Relocation doesn't work well. First, most anyplace suitable to a common animal like squirrels is filled to capacity. Most young resident squirrels are driven out to unsuitable places and starve.
Second, any newly introduced squirrel that does succeed means that just one more resident squirrel won't. It's a zero-sum game for the squirrels.
Third, relocation of varmints is generally illegal. The idea is that you can't transport your problem to someone else. Its like trying to get rid of a color on a Rubik's Cube by moving the pieces around.
I am vaguely disturbed by the idea that I am actively eliminating the MOST successful and adaptive squirrels. I LIKE evolution. But I suppose that is entirely the point of this effort. I want DUMB squirrels here...
The live trap allows me to catch varmints with causing them the pain of a snap trap or the danger of catching a cat. That doesn't mean I use it to let them live. I can't shoot them through a small mesh cage, I can't inject them with a forever-sleep drug, and I can't stab them fatally fast
My wheelbarrow holds JUST enough water to cover the live trap. The squirrel was gone in 15 seconds. Its the fastest way I can use and they don't seem to know what is happening until a very sudden end. It didn't even move around.
I don't want to draw this out and I probably won't give details again. I know I can't kill all the squirrels; I don't want to. I just need to eliminate the few squirrels who have learned to attack my garden. I would be perfectly happy just to have new squirrels who live off the acorns from the 2 massive old oaks and the nuts from the beech tree on the property.
I've given this post a lot of thought (1.5 hours). Best I can do...
UPDATE: 7 am 7-3-13.. Make that 2 evil squirrels.... If I can find the smallest bit of good news, they apparently breathe fast. The 2nd was dead in less than 10 seconds. I force myself to watch this so that I know what I am doing. The faster the end, the better, and they go fast! But the live-trap is reset with fresh peanut butter...
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Monday, July 1, 2013
Squirrel Games Again
Well, the bad news is that I uncovered the block of 9 corn seedlings in the afternoon yesterday (an opaque plastic bin) so that they could get some sunlight (the squirrels seem to stay away in the afternoon), and I forgot to put the cover back on them last night. 7 of the 9 seedlings were pulled up and most uneaten this morning. I meant to form a cover for them out of leftover chicken wire, but I got distracted by housework and putting the recycle bins out by the street, etc.
So I put the cover back over the surviving 2 plants and set 7 more seeds soaking overnight to replant tomorrow. I will use the bin I am covering the block with and use it as a form for a chicken wire cover BEFORE I replant them the 4th time. I should have done that the 1st time. But one time is happenstance, and the 2nd time can be coincidence. 3rd time is "enemy action" and I am at 4th.
Other bad news is that the squirrels are not going for the dried corn cob chunk in the live trap near the birdfeeder (I placed it there so I could easily see if, and how fast, it worked). It didn't get any attention.
So I decided to follow the advice of one website and use peanut butter smeared on the trap release lever. I put the trap on top of the fence the squirrels use as their highway from the tree grove to my garden. I attached a wire from the trap to the fence so that if one was caught it wouldn't fall into the neighbor's yard. Then I put some peanut butter on the release lever and tiny amounts in front of the trap and just inside of it.
The good news is that a squirrel followed the peanut butter, but tripped the trap while outside of it. But there are 2 wire bars that keep the doors from being pushed open from inside and I might not have secured those. And when I approached the trap, there was a squirrel right there, and it WANTED that peanut butter. So that bait might work if I set everything up correctly. I reset the trap before coming inside for the night. I hope to see a squirrel in there tomorrow morning.
I have high hopes for the peanut butter. And I really hope it works, because my tomatoes are starting to produce fruit and I don't want them stolen.
Enclosing each raised bed in chicken wire would be ridiculous, might prevent pollination, and be hard to access each time I needed to weed or harvest.
The alternative is to redesign my raised beds into one single large bed and enclose the entire thing with chicken wire, sides, and top (with a door of course). That would be a lot of work, it would be a bit ugly, and expensive. 1" mesh chicken wire isn't as expensive as some other garden fencings, but it isn't free.
So those individual talented garden-thieving squirrels just MUST go...
So I put the cover back over the surviving 2 plants and set 7 more seeds soaking overnight to replant tomorrow. I will use the bin I am covering the block with and use it as a form for a chicken wire cover BEFORE I replant them the 4th time. I should have done that the 1st time. But one time is happenstance, and the 2nd time can be coincidence. 3rd time is "enemy action" and I am at 4th.
Other bad news is that the squirrels are not going for the dried corn cob chunk in the live trap near the birdfeeder (I placed it there so I could easily see if, and how fast, it worked). It didn't get any attention.
So I decided to follow the advice of one website and use peanut butter smeared on the trap release lever. I put the trap on top of the fence the squirrels use as their highway from the tree grove to my garden. I attached a wire from the trap to the fence so that if one was caught it wouldn't fall into the neighbor's yard. Then I put some peanut butter on the release lever and tiny amounts in front of the trap and just inside of it.
The good news is that a squirrel followed the peanut butter, but tripped the trap while outside of it. But there are 2 wire bars that keep the doors from being pushed open from inside and I might not have secured those. And when I approached the trap, there was a squirrel right there, and it WANTED that peanut butter. So that bait might work if I set everything up correctly. I reset the trap before coming inside for the night. I hope to see a squirrel in there tomorrow morning.
I have high hopes for the peanut butter. And I really hope it works, because my tomatoes are starting to produce fruit and I don't want them stolen.
Enclosing each raised bed in chicken wire would be ridiculous, might prevent pollination, and be hard to access each time I needed to weed or harvest.
The alternative is to redesign my raised beds into one single large bed and enclose the entire thing with chicken wire, sides, and top (with a door of course). That would be a lot of work, it would be a bit ugly, and expensive. 1" mesh chicken wire isn't as expensive as some other garden fencings, but it isn't free.
So those individual talented garden-thieving squirrels just MUST go...
Sunday, June 30, 2013
More Squirrel Games
Determined to grow some flat italian style beans (Romano), I ordered some seeds from Burpee. The shipping cost more than the seeds, but it was the principle of the thing. They arrived yesterday and I soaked 12 seeds overnight.
I planted them today. The chicken wire covering the trellis soil wasn't too hard to lift. I had some garden clips (like round clothespins) to hold it up while I planted the new seeds. I also planted 5 new cuke seeds. The previous 6 came up but there were still gaps, so I filled them.
The squirrels don't seem to bother seedlings more than a few inches high (why they don't, I have no idea). Well, I'll make a guess that the new seedlings still have most of the growing seed and that's what the squirrels are after. But pure guess. I can't really know how squirrels think.
But under the 1" chicken wire cover, the beans and cukes should grow. The beans should begin to ripen in 60 days (sept 1st), so I could get 2 months of harvest even at this late date.
Now I have to figure out how to protect the tomatoes. That's trickier. I'll try draping the tomatoes in row cover cloth I think. If they chew through that (and they can), I will have to get more serious and lethal. I don't like "more lethal" things but anything that kills rats ought to kill squirrels...
Of all the plants I grow, I want the heirloom tomatoes the most. Last year, I didn't get a single one; the squirrels took them all before they were ripe. That will not happen this year if I have to trap and drown every squirrel within several properties.
I am considering a few designs to rebuild the garden beds and enclose them in chicken wire if I can't eliminate those few squirrels who have learned to depend on my garden for food.
If I redesign the garden beds to get them smaller and eliminate the spaces between them to make one large bed, I could build a frame to enclose the entire garden bed with a door for entry. I want a garden THAT much.
I planted them today. The chicken wire covering the trellis soil wasn't too hard to lift. I had some garden clips (like round clothespins) to hold it up while I planted the new seeds. I also planted 5 new cuke seeds. The previous 6 came up but there were still gaps, so I filled them.
The squirrels don't seem to bother seedlings more than a few inches high (why they don't, I have no idea). Well, I'll make a guess that the new seedlings still have most of the growing seed and that's what the squirrels are after. But pure guess. I can't really know how squirrels think.
But under the 1" chicken wire cover, the beans and cukes should grow. The beans should begin to ripen in 60 days (sept 1st), so I could get 2 months of harvest even at this late date.
Now I have to figure out how to protect the tomatoes. That's trickier. I'll try draping the tomatoes in row cover cloth I think. If they chew through that (and they can), I will have to get more serious and lethal. I don't like "more lethal" things but anything that kills rats ought to kill squirrels...
Of all the plants I grow, I want the heirloom tomatoes the most. Last year, I didn't get a single one; the squirrels took them all before they were ripe. That will not happen this year if I have to trap and drown every squirrel within several properties.
I am considering a few designs to rebuild the garden beds and enclose them in chicken wire if I can't eliminate those few squirrels who have learned to depend on my garden for food.
If I redesign the garden beds to get them smaller and eliminate the spaces between them to make one large bed, I could build a frame to enclose the entire garden bed with a door for entry. I want a garden THAT much.
Monday, June 24, 2013
OK Squirrels, Game ON!
I've had it with the squirrels pulling up my romano bean seeds, cucumbers, and corn. I LOVE those flat Italian beans and they are harder to find fresh than Giraffes at the North Pole. So after the squirrels pulled up most of the bean seeds again a 3rd time, I decided, as Bugs Bunny used to say "This Means War".
I went to the local hardware store and bought 50' of 3' wide chicken wire (aka "poultry netting"). I cut two pieces of it 20' long. It loves the way it is rolled up so I manually bent it flat and that took some effort. Then I made a tent of the two pieces along the trellis to shield my seedlings and the newly-planted new seeds.
"But", I hear you say, "they will find a way in". I'm EXPECTING that! Where they find a way in, THAT'S where I will cut a small opening and set the live-trap to just fit. And then I'll drop the live-trap in a trash can of water and drown the little %$@*#s ... And then I'll feed them to the cats!
Bwa-ha-ha-ha...
But seriously, for 20 years the squirrels and I mostly lived in peace. I put 2 baffles on the pole where I put sunflowers seeds for the birds and they can't get at the feeder. They were welcome to the seeds that the birds spill on the ground.
A few years ago, some squirrels in one tree grove started taking all the apples. I didn't mind that much because I never sprayed the apples and insects ruined them. Besides, it was funny watching them running along the top of the fence with apples in their mouths.
But then 2 years ago they started taking my tomatoes. I don't grow heirloom tomatoes for squirrrels... There are few enough fruits on an heirloom tomato as it is. Last year, I only got 2 ripe tomatoes from 8 plants.
This year they started pulling up the corn and bean seedlings for the tiny remnant of the planted seeds. I WILL have a garden. If I have to completely redesign the garden so that it can be enclosed with 1" mesh chicken wire and I have to pollinate the plants manually, I will do that! But killing those few squirrels who have learned to take my fruits and seedlings will (I hope) be easier. And I will not stay up nights unsleeping worrying about a few drowned squirrels...
I went to the local hardware store and bought 50' of 3' wide chicken wire (aka "poultry netting"). I cut two pieces of it 20' long. It loves the way it is rolled up so I manually bent it flat and that took some effort. Then I made a tent of the two pieces along the trellis to shield my seedlings and the newly-planted new seeds.
"But", I hear you say, "they will find a way in". I'm EXPECTING that! Where they find a way in, THAT'S where I will cut a small opening and set the live-trap to just fit. And then I'll drop the live-trap in a trash can of water and drown the little %$@*#s ... And then I'll feed them to the cats!
Bwa-ha-ha-ha...
But seriously, for 20 years the squirrels and I mostly lived in peace. I put 2 baffles on the pole where I put sunflowers seeds for the birds and they can't get at the feeder. They were welcome to the seeds that the birds spill on the ground.
A few years ago, some squirrels in one tree grove started taking all the apples. I didn't mind that much because I never sprayed the apples and insects ruined them. Besides, it was funny watching them running along the top of the fence with apples in their mouths.
But then 2 years ago they started taking my tomatoes. I don't grow heirloom tomatoes for squirrrels... There are few enough fruits on an heirloom tomato as it is. Last year, I only got 2 ripe tomatoes from 8 plants.
This year they started pulling up the corn and bean seedlings for the tiny remnant of the planted seeds. I WILL have a garden. If I have to completely redesign the garden so that it can be enclosed with 1" mesh chicken wire and I have to pollinate the plants manually, I will do that! But killing those few squirrels who have learned to take my fruits and seedlings will (I hope) be easier. And I will not stay up nights unsleeping worrying about a few drowned squirrels...
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Watering Trees
A neighbor has an orange bucket next to a tree he planted 2 years ago. I had wondered about that. Then today, I remembered a watering trick from a gardening magazine. Its funny how the brain can dredge up old information.
The idea was to slowly drip water from a small hole in the bucket onto the roots of a tree so it wouldn't run off. AHA! I have a few 5 gallon buckets around for various uses. So I took a green one (blends better into the background), drilled a very small hole into the bottom and set it next to the Sourwood tree I an trying to bring back to growth.
I love the Sourwood Tree. It has red and gold seeds and leaves in Fall. I planted 3 when I first moved here. 1 remains and it is only 3 feet high. I don't water the front yard as well as the back. Well, I live in the back and don't care about the front much (I'm changing that).
So I placed the 5 gallon bucket just uhill from the tree, filled it up with a hose, and watched what happened. It took 2 HOURS for the water to drip out the tiny hole. RThat means every drop went down into the root zone.
I LOVE this idea and will use the bucket all around the front yard plants. The advantage is that the bucket has a 5 gallons of water, but no more. I used to leave a hose dripping water out very slowly but I never knew how much it was getting (and forget it was going overnight sometimes.) THIS way, its 5 gallons and no need to remember it later.
What a great idea!
The idea was to slowly drip water from a small hole in the bucket onto the roots of a tree so it wouldn't run off. AHA! I have a few 5 gallon buckets around for various uses. So I took a green one (blends better into the background), drilled a very small hole into the bottom and set it next to the Sourwood tree I an trying to bring back to growth.
I love the Sourwood Tree. It has red and gold seeds and leaves in Fall. I planted 3 when I first moved here. 1 remains and it is only 3 feet high. I don't water the front yard as well as the back. Well, I live in the back and don't care about the front much (I'm changing that).
So I placed the 5 gallon bucket just uhill from the tree, filled it up with a hose, and watched what happened. It took 2 HOURS for the water to drip out the tiny hole. RThat means every drop went down into the root zone.
I LOVE this idea and will use the bucket all around the front yard plants. The advantage is that the bucket has a 5 gallons of water, but no more. I used to leave a hose dripping water out very slowly but I never knew how much it was getting (and forget it was going overnight sometimes.) THIS way, its 5 gallons and no need to remember it later.
What a great idea!
Friday, June 21, 2013
Plagues?
I'm beginning to get a bit suspicious at the series of "troublesome critters" this year. First there was the groundhog. I seem to get a couple each year for the past few years. I usually live-trap and relocate them miles away, but that is tiresome (and possibly illegal), and replacements always arrive for a while. This year I decided to just start dumping the bags of catbox scoopings into the burrow entrances. This groundhog dug 2 more new burrow entrances that I kept filling up before it gave up and moved away. At least, I can't FIND any new entrances and I haven't seen it out on the back lawn at dusk.
But perhaps it made a deal with the squirrels. As soon as IT vanished, the squirrels started pulling up my new bean, cuke, and corn seedlings. I've tried to live-trap THEM, but no luck yet. I attached the live-trap to the top of the fence they use as their personal highway, but I think they just run over top of it. I may have to encourage them to go THROUGH the live-trap with a small chicken wire wall above it.
Meanwhile, I was invaded by small ants. As mentioned in a previous post, they don't seem to be coming FROM anywhere or going TO anywhere in particular, just wandering around near the deck door and the kitchen backsplash. No trail of ants going back and forth, no food being targeted. They don't even bother the cat's food!
I think that the invasion is over, because I didn't see one for 2 days and then just one this morning.
But perhaps they all turned into houseflies! Yesterday morning, I woke up to find a dozen of them all buzzing at the living room window looking for a way out. The source baffles me. I haven't had any windows open, there are none in the garage where I keep the garbage, there are none in the small compost collection bin, there are none in the basement where some mouse might have gotten in and gotten killed by the cats.
They are easy enough to kill against the windows, but I found just as many there again TODAY! Killed those too of course.
What's next, a rain of frogs?
But perhaps it made a deal with the squirrels. As soon as IT vanished, the squirrels started pulling up my new bean, cuke, and corn seedlings. I've tried to live-trap THEM, but no luck yet. I attached the live-trap to the top of the fence they use as their personal highway, but I think they just run over top of it. I may have to encourage them to go THROUGH the live-trap with a small chicken wire wall above it.
Meanwhile, I was invaded by small ants. As mentioned in a previous post, they don't seem to be coming FROM anywhere or going TO anywhere in particular, just wandering around near the deck door and the kitchen backsplash. No trail of ants going back and forth, no food being targeted. They don't even bother the cat's food!
I think that the invasion is over, because I didn't see one for 2 days and then just one this morning.
But perhaps they all turned into houseflies! Yesterday morning, I woke up to find a dozen of them all buzzing at the living room window looking for a way out. The source baffles me. I haven't had any windows open, there are none in the garage where I keep the garbage, there are none in the small compost collection bin, there are none in the basement where some mouse might have gotten in and gotten killed by the cats.
They are easy enough to kill against the windows, but I found just as many there again TODAY! Killed those too of course.
What's next, a rain of frogs?
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Da Squirrels, Da Squirrels!
Well, I have pretty well confirmed that it's squirrels that have been
pulling up my bean and corn seedlings. The past 2 mornings, I have
slipped out of the house quietly in the morning and rousted several
squirrels from my garden at the right spots.
They all run away in the same direction. There is a grove of trees in the east neighbors' yards that direction that don't seem to produce much that a squirrel can eat. They seem to be aspen and birch. The trees on the west side are oaks, and I never see squirrels from the garden run in that direction.
Squirrel families are territorial, so I gather that the East Side squirrels are outcasts who are starving. I ALMOST feel sorry for them. Still, they pulled up 10 of my 12 bean seedlings, 18 of my 18 corn seedlings, and 6 of my 12 cucumber seedlings. It may also explain why most of my crocuses on the east side of my lawn have been dug up. Maybe I've been blaming the voles overly much (not that they are innocent either).
But the point is that there seems to be this one group of squirrels that have learned to get their food from my garden. I have been here 26 years and only started having a problem with squirrels 3 years ago. At first they only took the green apples from my 2 dwarf espaliered trees. I didn't mind that much because I never remembered to spray them and the insects always ruined the apples anyway. Last year, they started taking the green tomatoes. This year, its even the various seedlings. I have to stop this group before they teach others squirrels these damaging habits! I know that sounds silly, but local groups animals do learn successful feeding strategies not common throughout the species. So I am after one small group of squirrels.
I tried using a live trap several times, but I haven't caught a squirrel yet. I tried it on the ground next to the beans, on the ground just before the beans, and finally on the top of the fence where the squirrels run along. No luck! Well, I caught a young possum, and it won't be tripping my trap any more...
Well, maybe my bait was bad. I tried cashews, I tried a slice of peach, I tried a small apple picked from my tree. A couple of times the bait was simply gone with the enclosure doors closed, but most times the doors were shut with the bait still inside. I assume the squirrels ran over the top of the live trap and triggered the release lever.
So I went to a site that discussed the right bait for attracted squirrels into live traps. It said the best was peanut butter with peanuts in the shell stuck down onto it. I didn't have any of either. But I did had some dried corn on the cob. I bought a cheap bag of it to bribe the squirrels away from my garden, but hey if they like it that much, it should get them in the trap, right?
I sure hope so. One web site I found said that squirrels are gluttons and easy to trap. Right... I'll settle for ONE first.
They all run away in the same direction. There is a grove of trees in the east neighbors' yards that direction that don't seem to produce much that a squirrel can eat. They seem to be aspen and birch. The trees on the west side are oaks, and I never see squirrels from the garden run in that direction.
Squirrel families are territorial, so I gather that the East Side squirrels are outcasts who are starving. I ALMOST feel sorry for them. Still, they pulled up 10 of my 12 bean seedlings, 18 of my 18 corn seedlings, and 6 of my 12 cucumber seedlings. It may also explain why most of my crocuses on the east side of my lawn have been dug up. Maybe I've been blaming the voles overly much (not that they are innocent either).
But the point is that there seems to be this one group of squirrels that have learned to get their food from my garden. I have been here 26 years and only started having a problem with squirrels 3 years ago. At first they only took the green apples from my 2 dwarf espaliered trees. I didn't mind that much because I never remembered to spray them and the insects always ruined the apples anyway. Last year, they started taking the green tomatoes. This year, its even the various seedlings. I have to stop this group before they teach others squirrels these damaging habits! I know that sounds silly, but local groups animals do learn successful feeding strategies not common throughout the species. So I am after one small group of squirrels.
I tried using a live trap several times, but I haven't caught a squirrel yet. I tried it on the ground next to the beans, on the ground just before the beans, and finally on the top of the fence where the squirrels run along. No luck! Well, I caught a young possum, and it won't be tripping my trap any more...
Well, maybe my bait was bad. I tried cashews, I tried a slice of peach, I tried a small apple picked from my tree. A couple of times the bait was simply gone with the enclosure doors closed, but most times the doors were shut with the bait still inside. I assume the squirrels ran over the top of the live trap and triggered the release lever.
So I went to a site that discussed the right bait for attracted squirrels into live traps. It said the best was peanut butter with peanuts in the shell stuck down onto it. I didn't have any of either. But I did had some dried corn on the cob. I bought a cheap bag of it to bribe the squirrels away from my garden, but hey if they like it that much, it should get them in the trap, right?
I sure hope so. One web site I found said that squirrels are gluttons and easy to trap. Right... I'll settle for ONE first.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Those Darn Ants!
For 2 weeks, I have had very small ants wandering around the TV room and adjacent kitchen. They show up just inside the deck door, the kitchen windowsill, and on the backsplash board on the counters.
OK, ants seek food and sometimes they find their way into the house, but they aren't acting normal! There is no trail of ants going anywhere. There is no sign of them outside the house. There is no paricular entry point I can detect. There are never more than a few at a time, but there are ALWAYS a few any time I look.
They aren't in the pantry at some loose food box (I moved everything around and looked with a flashlight), they aren't at the cat food bowls, they aren't in the cabinets (flashlight again), they aren't even at the compost bin which is the main thing I would think would attract ants.
They aren't in the ceiling of the basement below the kitchen or the TV room.
Hey, this is vaguely sounding like a Dr Seuss poem... I'll have to work on that idea!
I sprayed only once right under the base of the deck door inside and out (and then cleaned the exposed floor because the cats found the smell interesting). I'm not too worried about the effect of the (organic) ant spray on cats because the stuff won't even annoy wasps and wasps evolved FROM ants (or vice versa) so they are very closely related, but why take chances. But the limited spraying had no effect on the few ants visible at all times.
The point is that I can't figure out WHERE they are coming from, WHY they are in here, WHAT is keeping them searching around, or WHEN they are most commonly seen. It seems completely constant, yet completely random.
I've probably killed over a thousand by finger and shoe. It doesn't seem to make any difference if I kill them or not. When I crush all the visible ones, there about as many in 10 minutes. Yet after not bothering them all night, there are still ONLY as many in the morning.
ON THE OTHER HAND, I haven't yet had a fruit fly (aka fungal gnats) yet this year, and I usually have problems with them by now. I'm pretty sure the ants aren't catching the fruit flies, but bigger theories have been proposed on such coincidental observations, LOL!
I expect the ants will simply stop appearing in a few days and I will never know why they where here or why they left. It will be one of those mysteries of nature; those "Ants In My Midst".
OK, ants seek food and sometimes they find their way into the house, but they aren't acting normal! There is no trail of ants going anywhere. There is no sign of them outside the house. There is no paricular entry point I can detect. There are never more than a few at a time, but there are ALWAYS a few any time I look.
They aren't in the pantry at some loose food box (I moved everything around and looked with a flashlight), they aren't at the cat food bowls, they aren't in the cabinets (flashlight again), they aren't even at the compost bin which is the main thing I would think would attract ants.
They aren't in the ceiling of the basement below the kitchen or the TV room.
Hey, this is vaguely sounding like a Dr Seuss poem... I'll have to work on that idea!
I sprayed only once right under the base of the deck door inside and out (and then cleaned the exposed floor because the cats found the smell interesting). I'm not too worried about the effect of the (organic) ant spray on cats because the stuff won't even annoy wasps and wasps evolved FROM ants (or vice versa) so they are very closely related, but why take chances. But the limited spraying had no effect on the few ants visible at all times.
The point is that I can't figure out WHERE they are coming from, WHY they are in here, WHAT is keeping them searching around, or WHEN they are most commonly seen. It seems completely constant, yet completely random.
I've probably killed over a thousand by finger and shoe. It doesn't seem to make any difference if I kill them or not. When I crush all the visible ones, there about as many in 10 minutes. Yet after not bothering them all night, there are still ONLY as many in the morning.
ON THE OTHER HAND, I haven't yet had a fruit fly (aka fungal gnats) yet this year, and I usually have problems with them by now. I'm pretty sure the ants aren't catching the fruit flies, but bigger theories have been proposed on such coincidental observations, LOL!
I expect the ants will simply stop appearing in a few days and I will never know why they where here or why they left. It will be one of those mysteries of nature; those "Ants In My Midst".
Saturday, June 15, 2013
Some Evil Squirrels
Some evil squirrels are about to die. I do not find pleasure in this. I admire squirrels in many ways; they are clever, agile, and adaptive and I generally respect that. I even think they are "cute". I set up two squirrel baffles on the bird-feeder and I thought we had reached an understanding. They couldn't reach the birdfeeder, but they were welcome to the seeds that fell.
But one one small group of them in a particular community learn to survive by eating every unripe apple, pull up every pole bean seedling, dig up every corn seedling, and pull off every heirloom tomato fruit , I have to put a stop to it.
I had squirrels around for the first 24 years here and never had a problem. 2 years ago , they suddenly learned to eat my tomatoes. Last year, they started to eat my bean seedling. This year, they are tearing up any plant I plant.
I wasn't sure it was really squirrels until yesterday when I caught them in the act. There were 3 squirrels in the garden at the places where I am losing plants that I am growing for my food! I know the direction they come from.
I seriously think it is just one group of squirrels. I intend to kill them as serious varmints.
I have several Hav-A-Hart live traps and one is sized for squirrels. But I must mention that I am only using Hav-A-Hart traps so that I won't catch innocent animals like my cats or other cats. Any squirrel I catch in the direction of the cadre that destroys my garden will die.
They have pulled up all my corn seedlings 3 times, my beans 3 times and half my cucumbers up twice. I admire squirrels a lot, but when it comes to MY food, they are going to lose. Its not ALL the squirrels; its only the ones that come from one direction and I'm going to get THOSE!
The most humane way I know to kill varmints is drowning. I tried stabbing them with arrows through the cage screen, but it didn't work fast. So I just drown them. Its not as bad as you think. They move around confused for a minute, then blurp an exhalation. Then they are gone.
I expect some complaints, but I've tried different ways and that is the fastest I've found.
But if it is a contest between my growing veggies for my own food and allowing the squirrels to stop me from growing my own food, the squirrels are going to lose gradually and eventually.
But one one small group of them in a particular community learn to survive by eating every unripe apple, pull up every pole bean seedling, dig up every corn seedling, and pull off every heirloom tomato fruit , I have to put a stop to it.
I had squirrels around for the first 24 years here and never had a problem. 2 years ago , they suddenly learned to eat my tomatoes. Last year, they started to eat my bean seedling. This year, they are tearing up any plant I plant.
I wasn't sure it was really squirrels until yesterday when I caught them in the act. There were 3 squirrels in the garden at the places where I am losing plants that I am growing for my food! I know the direction they come from.
I seriously think it is just one group of squirrels. I intend to kill them as serious varmints.
I have several Hav-A-Hart live traps and one is sized for squirrels. But I must mention that I am only using Hav-A-Hart traps so that I won't catch innocent animals like my cats or other cats. Any squirrel I catch in the direction of the cadre that destroys my garden will die.
They have pulled up all my corn seedlings 3 times, my beans 3 times and half my cucumbers up twice. I admire squirrels a lot, but when it comes to MY food, they are going to lose. Its not ALL the squirrels; its only the ones that come from one direction and I'm going to get THOSE!
The most humane way I know to kill varmints is drowning. I tried stabbing them with arrows through the cage screen, but it didn't work fast. So I just drown them. Its not as bad as you think. They move around confused for a minute, then blurp an exhalation. Then they are gone.
I expect some complaints, but I've tried different ways and that is the fastest I've found.
But if it is a contest between my growing veggies for my own food and allowing the squirrels to stop me from growing my own food, the squirrels are going to lose gradually and eventually.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Playing Risk Online
After practicing by myself for a few weeks, I rejoined online play. It was weird. The first 4 games I tried to join were apparently started by people who only start games to have inactive games. Those games never actually start. But the 5th game was weirder.
There were 4 other players, all who had many more game points than I did. And I had a terrible position (scattered around Central Asia, which is about the worst place to be). But 2 of the players had some sort of personal feud and I got Australia (barely).
Then they went to war over North and South America, so I took over Asia (while they also killed the other 2 players). It may have helped that I had just watched 2 hours of US Civil War battles because I would have made a general proud with enclosing moves and attacks on weak places.
So there were the 2 "strong" players still fussing with each other in North America and FOR ONCE I kept my forces carefully organized and only attacked with strength slowly and had Australia, Asia, Africa, and finally, Europe. And they both went "Hey wait, whats he doing?"
It was too late for both of them. LOL! Most satisfying game in quite a while. I wiped them both out while they were trading incriminations about each other's poor play.
The race may usually go to the swift and the battle to the best generals, and that's the way to bet. But the quiet and the sly also win sometimes. LOL!
There were 4 other players, all who had many more game points than I did. And I had a terrible position (scattered around Central Asia, which is about the worst place to be). But 2 of the players had some sort of personal feud and I got Australia (barely).
Then they went to war over North and South America, so I took over Asia (while they also killed the other 2 players). It may have helped that I had just watched 2 hours of US Civil War battles because I would have made a general proud with enclosing moves and attacks on weak places.
So there were the 2 "strong" players still fussing with each other in North America and FOR ONCE I kept my forces carefully organized and only attacked with strength slowly and had Australia, Asia, Africa, and finally, Europe. And they both went "Hey wait, whats he doing?"
It was too late for both of them. LOL! Most satisfying game in quite a while. I wiped them both out while they were trading incriminations about each other's poor play.
The race may usually go to the swift and the battle to the best generals, and that's the way to bet. But the quiet and the sly also win sometimes. LOL!
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Ticked Off
My backyard is not mostly lawn. 2/3s of it was wooded and under-brushy when I moved in and I have gradually removed most of the trees. Its not that I dont like trees (I do) but the neighbors let trees grow so tall all around my property lines that I was desperate for some sunlight for my flowerbeds and veggie garden. So there are actually MORE trees in the general area.
But one consequence is that the open formerly wooded area is growing all sorts of junk; briars, spurge, burdock, mock strawberries, vines, and tall grasses. Ticks love that stuff. I have to thoroughly check the cats when they come in. I check myself too, but I'm pretty sensitive to anything moving on me.
(Warning, possible TMI alert - You may want to stop reading)
But some places are less sensitive than others. Like the (ahem) "base of the spine". I idly scratched there a couple of times the other day before realizing that there was a tick. Upon divesting myself of some clothing I realized I must have chased it around a bit. I had 4 bite-bumps in just 4 sq inches! I pulled it off before it drew any blood and put it on the counter where I put a drop of rubbing alcohol on it. That always kills them. Not to be gross, but I then scratched all the bumps a bit raw and put Neosporin on them. The Lone Star ticks don't carry the worst tick diseases, but I like to be careful. even though the literature says it takes 12 hours before they can transmit any disease.
I did some research tonight, and it seems my yard has Lone Star Ticks (aka Seed Ticks). They are fast little suckers! Deet is supposed to repel them, but it doesn't according to some videos I watched. On the other hand, they seem to get me where I don't use Deet. I should mention that we have Asian Tiger Mosquitos here in MD (the only kind that I can't detect when they are on me) so I use a 7% Deet spray on my arms outdoors (which is generally sufficient) and I wear long tan twill pants even in Summer. So when I find a tick on me it is usually behind my knees or on my back. Hmmm, maybe the Deet DOES work. I think I will start spraying it on my pants legs and socks.
I rarely find a tick on the cats (although Iza famously had one right on her butt once). And I found a dead shell of one in Marley's earfolds once. He is touchy about me exploring there, so I tend to avoid it.
Well, anyway, the tick-bite-bumps have gone away now, I don't see any reaction, and the tick was too flat to have started to get any blood yet.
But watch out for those things. Most ticks move slowly but the Lone Star ticks run like ants! I wear the tan twill pants when working outside partly because it is easy to spot them. But these ones can get over your socks and on your legs before you check.
The backyard, other than the gardens is mostly a wasteland of scrub growth. I used to rather like the wildness of it. I keep the gardens organic, but I am not so fussy about the non-edible areas. I'm going to spray Roundup around a lot of the area. And trap the voles which seem to be the tick vectors here.
I'm sure you will forgive me for not taking pictures of the tick-bites, LOL!
But one consequence is that the open formerly wooded area is growing all sorts of junk; briars, spurge, burdock, mock strawberries, vines, and tall grasses. Ticks love that stuff. I have to thoroughly check the cats when they come in. I check myself too, but I'm pretty sensitive to anything moving on me.
(Warning, possible TMI alert - You may want to stop reading)
But some places are less sensitive than others. Like the (ahem) "base of the spine". I idly scratched there a couple of times the other day before realizing that there was a tick. Upon divesting myself of some clothing I realized I must have chased it around a bit. I had 4 bite-bumps in just 4 sq inches! I pulled it off before it drew any blood and put it on the counter where I put a drop of rubbing alcohol on it. That always kills them. Not to be gross, but I then scratched all the bumps a bit raw and put Neosporin on them. The Lone Star ticks don't carry the worst tick diseases, but I like to be careful. even though the literature says it takes 12 hours before they can transmit any disease.
I did some research tonight, and it seems my yard has Lone Star Ticks (aka Seed Ticks). They are fast little suckers! Deet is supposed to repel them, but it doesn't according to some videos I watched. On the other hand, they seem to get me where I don't use Deet. I should mention that we have Asian Tiger Mosquitos here in MD (the only kind that I can't detect when they are on me) so I use a 7% Deet spray on my arms outdoors (which is generally sufficient) and I wear long tan twill pants even in Summer. So when I find a tick on me it is usually behind my knees or on my back. Hmmm, maybe the Deet DOES work. I think I will start spraying it on my pants legs and socks.
I rarely find a tick on the cats (although Iza famously had one right on her butt once). And I found a dead shell of one in Marley's earfolds once. He is touchy about me exploring there, so I tend to avoid it.
Well, anyway, the tick-bite-bumps have gone away now, I don't see any reaction, and the tick was too flat to have started to get any blood yet.
But watch out for those things. Most ticks move slowly but the Lone Star ticks run like ants! I wear the tan twill pants when working outside partly because it is easy to spot them. But these ones can get over your socks and on your legs before you check.
The backyard, other than the gardens is mostly a wasteland of scrub growth. I used to rather like the wildness of it. I keep the gardens organic, but I am not so fussy about the non-edible areas. I'm going to spray Roundup around a lot of the area. And trap the voles which seem to be the tick vectors here.
I'm sure you will forgive me for not taking pictures of the tick-bites, LOL!
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