5 Ways to STOP Animals EATING or DESTROYING Your Food Garden

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2024
  • In this video, I give you 5 top ways to stop animals from eating or destroying your food or vegetable garden.
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Комментарии • 675

  • @Selfsufficientme
    @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +212

    G'day Everyone, I hope you are all growing well and harvesting a ton! I have met dozens of you over the past few weeks (out and about) and have thoroughly enjoyed chatting with you about your gardening and life in general - thanks for saying g'day and supporting my vids! Cheers, Mark

    • @m53goldsmith
      @m53goldsmith Год назад +2

      Such great advice and entertaining with it. I used your netting solution shown at 9:26 last season and it worked a treat! Thanks, Mark!

    • @lisaswinson8187
      @lisaswinson8187 Год назад +1

      Hello Mark from Washington state! G'day mate.

    • @Chrazzari
      @Chrazzari Год назад +1

      Electrocution means death by electric shock lol. It sounds shocking (pardon the pun) because it's killing them. I think the term is just "electric shock".

    • @Ms.Byrd68
      @Ms.Byrd68 Год назад

      Trying to personally scare animals could backfire on you because just as with Humans it's 'Flight or Fight' with them and depending on the animal you could get hurt or get someone you love hurt.

    • @mistersmith8962
      @mistersmith8962 Год назад +1

      Belly Button Mic - patent pending

  • @XenobiaF
    @XenobiaF Год назад +63

    My granddaughter saves the fur from brushing her Great Pyrenees dogs for me. I put it around whatever the deer and other critters are eating. I have dog hair everywhere and have to put out fresh hair every few weeks, but it’s been working well for me.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +12

      Wow, using scent to keep animals away! Love it :)

    • @anavelaeshomestead
      @anavelaeshomestead Год назад +3

      Love it, ❤ I'm a dog groomer so I've got an abundant supply of this. LOL

    • @SweetChicagoGator
      @SweetChicagoGator Год назад +2

      Good idea and you can put perforated grills oblong or long, around on top of the hairs so the winds and the animals won't disturb them. They'll just come and smell dog and run fast the other way ! 😁

    • @XenobiaF
      @XenobiaF Год назад

      @@SweetChicagoGator I use a lot of cookie racks to keep birds away from young plants. Using them for holding down dog fur is a great idea. Thank you!

  • @peytonthedietitian2651
    @peytonthedietitian2651 Год назад +4

    The scaring worked! I watched on low volume but when you yelled my house rabbit ran from her hiding spot to my lap for protection. Now she knows to stay out of your garden!

  • @tattooedhoosier77
    @tattooedhoosier77 Год назад +26

    I work as a discount retailer in the "flyover states" of the US. Totally sold over 70 small containers to someone, on discount. Suggested checking you out because of your raised beds/containers. Hope you gained at least one more Hoosier. Best growing to you Sir!

  • @alexcrowl
    @alexcrowl Год назад +13

    Squirrels have been eating my tomatoes and I needed this today

    • @yellowsnowangel
      @yellowsnowangel Год назад +3

      Same!! Every year I’m at war with the little terrorists. The red squirrels are particularly clever and territorial. Godspeed, my friend! 👍

  • @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority
    @HealthyDisrespectforAuthority Год назад +49

    Well now I have to go look up what kangaroos do eat..
    done.
    There's a woman in southern California (Robbie) doing container gardening that uses dress making tulle to keep pests away from her plants. It seems to work wonders. It comes in full bolts - way cheaper than garden netting.

    • @jotaroslegs2345
      @jotaroslegs2345 Год назад +8

      I watch Robbie all the time too, and I recommend the Tulle to everyone who is having a problem. I love Mark's channel and his humor.

    • @lupitacameron9693
      @lupitacameron9693 Год назад +5

      I too recommend using tulle to keep your veggies safe. I took Robbie’s advice about using tulle and have had success in keeping squirrels, rats, and birds from eating my veggies. Now I get to enjoy a beautiful harvest.

    • @janeaneingram3302
      @janeaneingram3302 Год назад +2

      Kangaroos eat mainly grasses, some soft native herbs & native shrubs. Their teeth aren't adapted to eat vegetables. Possums also eat native fruits & a variety of leaves so happy to eat garden produce. Possums also eat insects & baby birds including fledglings.

    • @bunhelsingslegacy3549
      @bunhelsingslegacy3549 Год назад

      Huh, I always wondered how well that would hold up under UV light!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +8

      I have also noticed other materials similar to purpose-made garden netting that are much cheaper such as some camping mosquito nets and general fabrics. So I agree with you that experimentation using other materials such as netting for the garden can pay real dividends! All the best :)

  • @industrialtumbleweed3849
    @industrialtumbleweed3849 Год назад +18

    I use shiny pinwheels all around my garden to help keep birds and smaller rodents out. They spin and flash in the sun and are easy to attach to various locations & different heights using zip ties. I like them better than the flash tape, but I also done have nearly as large an area to cover. I also saw someone using mini disco ball tree ornaments for the same purpose.

  • @swingbelly
    @swingbelly Год назад +18

    We were having a problem with critters in our backyard gardens here in Toronto; rabbits, squirrels, and deer that were devastating our garden and plants. My wife put up bird feeders and suet stations well away from the veggie gardens that attracted a wide variety of birds. These soon attracted a family of brown hawks, falcons and even Great Horned Owls that in turn prey upon these foraging critters. Motion detectors pick up deer intrusion and the bright lights scare them off. Since then, our vegetable garden is doing well. Nature taking care of nature!
    Thanks for the videos, Mark. We really enjoy them and for the time you have taken to relate your experiences and well earned wisdom! From Canada where we are in our summer, but heading into the Fall season (absolutely beautiful) and eventually into a long, cold Winter. Cheers, mate, as I raise a frosty cold Canadian beer to you!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +2

      Thanks for sharing your veggie garden success story Norman! It sounds beautiful where you are, and I know that you can't grow anything outdoors during your winter, but I imagine it's picturesque... Cheers :)

    • @Klaaism
      @Klaaism Год назад +1

      May also consider a Shishi-odoshi. Its a very low tech solution used in Japanese water features that scares off deer and other critters. Its the wooden tube or bamboo that fills up with water until it tips over to empty , slamming down with a bonk. Exact designs can vary.

  • @AwesomeFish12
    @AwesomeFish12 Год назад +3

    Possums won't climb anything super wobbly, so when I fence off garden beds, I make the posts shorter than the wire so the top 30cm+ can bend back and forth freely, no more possums. They reach the top, it flops over and they drop off.

  • @MS-ku7tl
    @MS-ku7tl Год назад +28

    I plant pots of mint and lemon balm. I put them around my grow area. It deters bugs and critters. I have also put moth balls into an old take out container with a lid. A few holes lets the smell out but the rain from filling out. This did a good job also.

    • @myurbangarden7695
      @myurbangarden7695 Год назад +2

      Good idea

    • @mistersmith8962
      @mistersmith8962 Год назад +1

      Da turds have been deterred

    • @baddriversofcolga
      @baddriversofcolga Год назад +2

      Moth balls are illegal to use outside due to how toxic they are.

    • @MS-ku7tl
      @MS-ku7tl Год назад +1

      Good to know. Old timers here always recommended. Thank you.

    • @cynthiawaite4410
      @cynthiawaite4410 Год назад +2

      @@baddriversofcolga they said it had a lid so only letting the smell out.

  • @DoubleplusUngoodthinkful
    @DoubleplusUngoodthinkful Год назад +2

    Maybe you can harvest the turkeys as well as the veggies :)
    Or maybe trap and relocate...to your dining table!

  • @andersonomo597
    @andersonomo597 Год назад +3

    5:06 - love how your dog just pretended to eat while eyeballing it and then had a go at the bush turkey. I don't think my wee Westie would have been so laid back about it though!!

  • @hlwan6061
    @hlwan6061 Год назад +1

    I make my own windchimes from glass bottles and big, flashy light weight sails and hang them throughout my garden. Seems to keep monkeys, tree shrews and pigeons at a distance. Most importantly, I love the symphony of sounds when the breeze kicks in. Very pleasing to the ear.

  • @IowaKim
    @IowaKim Год назад +15

    Great info! This is my second year with electric fencing from Premier 1 products, a company in Washington, Iowa. I have the deer resistant semi-permanent fence, and nothing has penetrated it that is ground based. My sweet corn is fruiting now and the real test will be with the raccoons. Deer have not attempted to jump, no possums, cats, ground hogs, squirrels, rabbits, turkeys. The bug eating birds like to hang out on it and I have noticed way less insect pests, even the pesky Japanese beetle. I see the Kingbird, Wrens, Bluebirds & flycatchers hanging out. Great product and the first time a low cost solution has made me think the garden is mostly protected. Thanks Mark for the great tips!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +2

      Great to hear first-hand Kim that this method is working well! Thanks for sharing your experience, cheers :)

  • @connorwisnom645
    @connorwisnom645 Год назад +13

    Thank you for the information! We've been having racoon problems here in Pennsylvania. Also those bush turkeys and feral pigs look delicious just saying

    • @taviag4302
      @taviag4302 Год назад +1

      Alas, bush turkeys are not delicious, many have tried apparently. Also it's illegal to eat feral pigs in Australia because they carry brucellosis which can be deadly, people shoot them purely for fun.

    • @connorwisnom645
      @connorwisnom645 Год назад

      @@taviag4302 ugh that is disapointing!

    • @lisacastano1064
      @lisacastano1064 Год назад

      Try firecrackers when you catch them

  • @leapingkitties
    @leapingkitties Год назад +33

    Chocolate Pudding fruit, so excited to see that one. I don't have garden space, but I sure enjoy your content. My brother uses children's pinwheels interspersed through the garden to help keep the rabbits out and they're cheap and fun to spot among the flowers and veggies.

    • @ann7318
      @ann7318 Год назад +1

      sounds like a good excuse to buy pinwheels.

    • @RebeccaTreeseed
      @RebeccaTreeseed Год назад

      I'm gonna add pinwheels!

    • @smas3256
      @smas3256 Год назад

      Do small birds get used to that? I put scallions around the perimeter to keep bunnies out. The birds eat my snails and slugs and bugs.

    • @RebeccaTreeseed
      @RebeccaTreeseed Год назад

      @@smas3256 good question. I create lizard habitat all around my raised hugelkultur beds. They eat the insects, but I get good pollination. I use Christmas jingle bells to deter black bear and mule deer, they don't seem to bother lizards or birds. My lizards have lots of hidey holes to escape birds. I hope pinwheels deter squirrels.

    • @jackierosenwald4193
      @jackierosenwald4193 Год назад

      I use pinwheels around my garden. Keeps out the deer, raccoons and squirrels.

  • @jayduplessis7698
    @jayduplessis7698 Год назад +1

    Plastic bags tied in a tree or amongst your crop work, because not only does it move randomly in the wind, it also makes a rustling noise, which seem to make most animals nervous. My grandmother used to tie these in her fig tree to keep away sparrows, so I tried it amongst my tomatoes to keep away rats at night, and it worked (they did not eat any of the tomatoes on the plant it was tied to, or the one next to it).

  • @squirrellyatlas6505
    @squirrellyatlas6505 Год назад +4

    Between squirrels and the neighbor's chickens I feel like my garden is in a constant pitched battle lol

    • @bunhelsingslegacy3549
      @bunhelsingslegacy3549 Год назад +2

      Haha, I let my friend's chickens into the garden once in the hopes that they'd eat some of the bugs that were plentiful at the time.... they were rapidly shooed back out when one decided she had to peck every ripe tomato exactly once!

  • @squirrellyatlas6505
    @squirrellyatlas6505 Год назад +36

    Great tips!
    I also used cattle panel (basic wire fencing) directly as a cover on my raised beds as I used to have a major feral cat problem. Nothing wanted to dig there anymore, and think it would work with the bush turkeys too. Only catch: must be on before planting anything bigger than seedlings, so they can grow up through the wire fence panel.

    • @deadmanswife3625
      @deadmanswife3625 Год назад

      I love it

    • @janeaneingram3302
      @janeaneingram3302 Год назад +1

      Cattle panels wouldn't stop feral deer or pigs or native wombats & holes are too big to stop snakes or rats. Possums would climb the panels so could still eat fruit or urinate on produce. Floppy wire best for possums as they prefer a strong structure to climb on. I have removed all fruit trees from my garden due to possums & insect pests except a lemon tree.

    • @debbi945
      @debbi945 Год назад

      Where did you find cattle panels? Are you in Australia as I definitely need to buy some

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +2

      Yes, I have used this method also, and it works well - thanks for sharing. Cheers :)

    • @squirrellyatlas6505
      @squirrellyatlas6505 Год назад

      @@debbi945 I am in the US, but bought it at a basic hardware store.

  • @michaelgreenlee9431
    @michaelgreenlee9431 Год назад +3

    I learned this in electrical theory class. "Electrocution" is DEATH by electricity. Ever since then it really bothers me to hear it used wrong. So "electric shock" is the right terminology for what an electric fence does.

  • @philohsann5701
    @philohsann5701 Год назад +1

    Hi Mark For a few years I have enjoyed your videos, and now I would like to tell you, what I use to keep birds and rabbits out of my garden and cherry trees. I use old CD's and DVD'S that I don't like anymore. I use fishing line, to tie the CD to and hang them, some in the tree, and others from the house gutters. When the sun hits the CD it sends a flash of light across the area, and It scares them and they move away! It has worked the last two years. Now I get cherries, blue berry, carrots and lettuce! I hope someone can use this tip, to keep the birds and rabbits away. Keep up the great videos!!

  • @reggie5
    @reggie5 Год назад +2

    Having a water pistol or sprayer is handy to deter the neighbour's cat from pooping in your (raised) bed. Also sharp and pointy twigs/branches can deter them (and looks more natural). Who likes a stick up their bum? Chicken wire laid on the surface stops digging and I was pleased that my garlic grew through it, but then it was a bugger in the end to extract the garlic from underneath it.

  • @rebeccahherdener2068
    @rebeccahherdener2068 Год назад +18

    Thank you so much for sharing your discoveries upon the gardening journey! I find it truly fascinating and helpful!🥰💕

  • @slomo1716
    @slomo1716 Год назад +6

    Great video! Loved your jumping up to SCARE us for number 5!!! Got me! After planting my cucumbers, a second time, after either birds or squirrels destroyed my first set of seedlings, I placed window screen over the plantings and voila did the trick so they could grow to a size where they were not longer bothered by critters.

    • @cltinturkey
      @cltinturkey Год назад

      I do this too. Even over seeds for a week or two so they can get a footing. You just check it daily and remove the screens after the seedlings have settled in and grown a bit.

  • @carlydillon6926
    @carlydillon6926 Год назад

    My garden borders 5 acres of tress full of ground squirrels, birds and forest animals. I have a 6 foot chicken wire fence around it. The squirrels are the biggest pest and dig holes in my raised beds and take a bite out of a strawberry, ground cherry or cherry tomato. I was using bird netting this summer and had to save one bird and 2 lizards. I had to cut several pieces off the lizards. I won't use bird netting again. I purchased more mesh bags and have individually place around a branch of raspberries, strawberries, and juicy tomatoes. I am actually getting a harvest. And now that black berries are ripening, they aren't going after my raspberries. Great video Mark! Cheers from Southern Oregon! Big fan!

  • @joybeum7177
    @joybeum7177 Год назад +1

    The possums (American) and foxes that come around might occasionally eat a few chicks, but are completely uninterested in my veggies. It's my own chickens that I have to protect my raised beds as they will scratch up my plants. Each bed is fully fenced and covered on top!

  • @christinej2358
    @christinej2358 Год назад +3

    I save my aluminum pie pans from store pie shells to use in my garden. After the pie has been ate, I wash it, then poke a hole in it just below the side, tie a strong string to it loosely on a pole in my garden. You want it to be able to swing around and hit the pole to make noise. I had several all around the entire garden hanging on poles. When the wind blows the pan hit up against the pole and makes a clanging noise, it’s shiny and reflects light that scares off animals. The more pans hanging off poles the better. When the wind pulls hard and splits the pan I did lose some during heavy storms with high wind. I didn’t replace them during the summer, so sad to say the deer for the first time in over 22 years of gardening came in and ate my sunflowers and the little bit of corn I planted. I learned a lesson this year. I’ll make sure to replace any lost pie pans during the entire growing season, because they are very effective from keeping animals out of it. The aluminum pie pans are way cheaper than an expensive sound system or even the flying birds. If you don’t have pie pans, they are usually cheap at a dollar store or ask a friend to save them for you. Some people hang a bunch of tin cans together on strings to make noise, but I found aluminum pie pans work best. Thank you for sharing all your tips in gardening!

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous Год назад +1

      Fantastic idea, I'll give it a try.

  • @Yestradamus-
    @Yestradamus- Год назад +1

    I use snap poppers and a sling shot. The adult version is a firecracker without a fuse. It’s loud. I use them to drive coyote and javelina away from cats and veggies. Conveniently they fit inside my blow gun. Silent accurate delivery.

  • @diligentdavey
    @diligentdavey Год назад +1

    I saw a gardener's video in the US who plants flowers and bushes, etc, that naturally repel certain animals. Lavender, for example, repels deer (& perhaps other animals). I've seen lists and photos of other plants that can help you repel other pests away from fruits & vegetables you're trying to grow!

  • @keithkishishita5783
    @keithkishishita5783 Год назад +2

    I come from America. We love turkey for dinner, especially around Thanksgiving and Christmas.

  • @sightseeinginstyle8119
    @sightseeinginstyle8119 Год назад +2

    Down here in Tassie the wallabies absolutely destroy the vege gardens.....no patch of spinach, carrot or beetroot is safe from the tenacious little hoppers haha. I've had to install some pretty impressive fencing enclosures around my medicinal and culinary herb gardens just to save a few leaves each year haha!

  • @wilsonsmom411
    @wilsonsmom411 Год назад +5

    This year the most effective was bird net “bunting” around the rim of my raised beds. It has kept the squirrels out, who were doing the most damage with their digging. Love these videos, keep them coming!

    • @ltgemini1599
      @ltgemini1599 Год назад +1

      Can you provide more detail on your bunting design/process? Thank you

    • @RebeccaTreeseed
      @RebeccaTreeseed Год назад

      Yes, please do.

    • @smas3256
      @smas3256 Год назад

      Scallions.

  • @offtheainahomestead1749
    @offtheainahomestead1749 Год назад +9

    Thank you for the well knowledge, you’ve given me great inspiration and confidence to start my garden Channel and spread this passion of self sufficient gardening. Thank you again

  • @Gardeningchristine
    @Gardeningchristine Год назад +6

    Great content every time! I put your videos on repeat and listen while I’m out gardening. So zen!

  • @johnetsio
    @johnetsio Год назад +4

    kangaroos got into my broccoli bed about 3 days before harvest. chomped them down to stubs. had beets in there too but they didn't touch them. Love the vids mate, keeping me inspired

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +2

      Years ago, I did have a wild wallaby eat a BBQ shape biscuit right out of my hand, so I guess they might be tempted to try other things, but the majority eat grass, as we know, and raised beds definitely help. All the best! :)

    • @SamStone1964
      @SamStone1964 Год назад +1

      Same thing happened to me although I harvest broccoli continually so it's never huge. Lived here just over 3 years and this is first time they've eaten my vegies. I've now put those toddler fences all around my broccoli and it's starting to resprout a bit. Should be flourishing by mid Spring.

  • @lorineidtinytoadplot744
    @lorineidtinytoadplot744 Год назад +1

    I had an old horse (over 25 years) she use to test the electric fence with her eye. She would get her eye right up close to the line 👁 I have no idea how that works lol but she did know when it was off. 🤷‍♀ She'd lean over the line pushing on it to reach into the garden or pick fruit off trees lol

  • @D71219ONE
    @D71219ONE Год назад +6

    David The Good says that if you have a pest problem, your garden is deficient in an element…Lead🔫 *click*
    *I personally can’t bring myself to kill anything, regardless of how much they’re destroying my garden. I even feel bad about killing ants.* 😅

    • @kevdimo6459
      @kevdimo6459 Год назад

      Hahaha 😝

    • @MysticDonBlair
      @MysticDonBlair Год назад

      I think it’s good to shoot the pest animals. Plus you get meat.
      I think it’s bad to kill for no reason though.
      It must be to protect your food, property, family, etc…

    • @lelleithmurray235
      @lelleithmurray235 Год назад

      🤣
      I had someone comment that about my ongoing issues with a giant iguana,but it may come down to doing that to supplement our food supply in the near future.

    • @D71219ONE
      @D71219ONE Год назад

      @@MysticDonBlair I don’t disagree, but I just can’t bring myself to do it personally, lol.

  • @delsurf71
    @delsurf71 Год назад +2

    I see your challenges during all seasons but as a grower in N.A. zone 7b I think I would really enjoy the challenges you face. Good on you for what you do.

  • @anavelaeshomestead
    @anavelaeshomestead Год назад +1

    We're saving the silver bags that from wine and water casks, to hang in the fruit trees. Thanks for your content, we've just bought an acre property and it's a blank canvas. Starting an edible garden from scratch, cockatoos and galahs are a big problem here.
    Another pest which I've discovered is Earwigs, I've had to jump on that, as they were destroying the young nectarine tree.

  • @shotty_3552
    @shotty_3552 Год назад +5

    I would love to have a property like yours. Being able to grow my own vegies and fruit is a big dream of mine. I hope to one day follow in your footsteps. Thanks for the vid!

  • @childofthesun8889
    @childofthesun8889 Год назад +1

    i love how you said there's usually enough for your family and the animals as well

  • @Gardeningchristine
    @Gardeningchristine Год назад +17

    I covered my kale this year with mosquito netting and it was effective until a harlequin bug found a small hole. Had to eradicate with dust, but better than treating it all summer like the uncovered brassicas. They have been mostly decimated by cabbage white butterfly, harlequin bugs, and aphids. I put up a Japanese beetle trap and it has been very effective! Only a couple on the plants.

    • @groussac
      @groussac Год назад +3

      I found that Japanese beetles like the large marigolds better than anything else in the garden. Another way of dealing with them...

    • @bunhelsingslegacy3549
      @bunhelsingslegacy3549 Год назад +2

      My Japanese Beetles mostly stay on my raspberry bushes but putting all the brassicas under a row cover really helped keep the bok choy from getting peppered with holes from flea beetles and chewed to smithereens by cabbage worms!

    • @groussac
      @groussac Год назад +1

      @@bunhelsingslegacy3549 JBs not much of a problem this year. Too dry, I guess. However, something's taking down my Swiss chard. How do you ID which bug is doing the damage?

    • @joanies6778
      @joanies6778 Год назад +2

      Grasshoppers eat holes in my netting, allowing other flying pests through if they find the holes. Fortunately, no cabbage moths have found their way in, except for one. But I did not find any eggs, so perhaps it was looking for a mate. 😵‍💫

    • @josieweishaar9489
      @josieweishaar9489 Год назад +2

      @@groussac I had a problem with gold finches eating my Swiss chard. Last year I surrounded the row with chicken wire. I literarily saw them climbing through the chicken wire and eat the leaves. This year I planted my Swiss chard in large pots and put half inch hardware cloth around and on top of the plants. They can still peck at the leaves growing up against the hardware cloth but I cut the pecked leaves off and harvest the rest.

  • @tater357
    @tater357 Год назад

    Glad I found your new channel, I've kinda been wondering why I haven't seen any new videos of yours. Gives me something to binge watch now so I can get caught up.

  • @daniellebissonnette3304
    @daniellebissonnette3304 Год назад +1

    Good advice, thank you. Earlier this summer, I had chipmunks eating the first leaves on my hostas. Quick search on the internet, and I found a recipe for liquid detergent mixed with water and tabasco sauce. I sprayed both sides of every leaf and repeated after every heavy rain fall for about a month. After that, I had only a couple of leaves chewed off then it stopped completely. Inexpensove and expensive.

  • @peter2327
    @peter2327 Год назад +1

    Over here its netting for fruit trees, traps for voles (the ones with the acoustic bang…), ladybugs and darwin wasps for aphids and cabbage flies, sugar and yeast for ants in the house, and proper fences for anything else.

  • @racebiketuner
    @racebiketuner Год назад +2

    I put sections of chain link fence flat on the ground to keep critters from digging. It's expensive to buy new, so I shop hard for used stuff and odds/ends from fencing companies. I prefer a width of 4 feet, as it's a lot easier to deploy when I'm working alone. I cut pieces 5 feet long for large areas and two feet long for small areas or irregular ground.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад

      Skirts around the base of boundaries and in areas where digging occurs are very effective - thanks for sharing! :)

  • @iwanttobelieve5970
    @iwanttobelieve5970 Год назад +2

    I just wrapped my raised beds in netting. I still have a few tomato plants that are exposed because I ran out. But, I am harvesting tomatoes again. I saw that the raccoons tried biting into my peppers. Guess they didn't like that. LOL.

  • @TShirtAndReeboks
    @TShirtAndReeboks Год назад +3

    I absolutely love seeing the native Australian wildlife. Especially loved seeing the lorikeets!

  • @np6032
    @np6032 Год назад +2

    Fantastic! We've been blessed to not have any pest issues other than a few naughty insects. A couple of rabbits have lurked around lately and we chased them off with one of our little doggies, and they haven't done anything. These are all awesome tips that will definitely be put to use if needed! We love your channel! Your garden and orchards are amazing! You always have fantastic tips!

  • @BamaDad
    @BamaDad Год назад

    IN the U.S. we, especially in the southern parts have issues with White Tail Deer! They wreak havoc on ornamental plants, flower gardens and vegetable gardens. One of the ways we have used to deter the deer from grazing in our flower beds and vegetable gardens is human hair. get yourself a sack from your local barber who is usually more than happy to oblige, put a handful in a stocking and hang them around your plants and the deer stay away!

  • @crochetingaroundnewzealand
    @crochetingaroundnewzealand Год назад +4

    Also keeping some humans out of our backyard gardens is important these days. Lots of thieves cos veges are so expensive.

  • @tinakoziol1690
    @tinakoziol1690 Год назад +2

    Great tips/ideas for keeping those unwanted visitors out of the garden. We have a issue with deer and rabbits.
    Thanks for sharing your experience ❤️

  • @juneramirez8580
    @juneramirez8580 Год назад +2

    I agree with you on living with most wildlife. I have wild rabbits in my yard and I found one weed they love more than my veggies. Other bushes they help trim. I cage all new bushes while small to protect the plants. Once they grow some the rabbits don't destroy them. I do have some birds digging out my garden pots and I haven't had success with yet.

  • @christymartin9404
    @christymartin9404 Год назад

    I had good luck with bagging fruits like you did & the shiny tape worked well also.

  • @juliehorney995
    @juliehorney995 Год назад

    Excellent. Thank you Mark!

  • @IVMRGREENXX
    @IVMRGREENXX Год назад +1

    that turkey is determined to get "invited" to Thanksgiving dinner

  • @garulusglandarius6126
    @garulusglandarius6126 Год назад +9

    Been eagerly waiting for your next video Mark and wasn’t disappointed. Love your compassion, consideration and tolerance for wildlife ( as we all should do ). Thank you for my enjoyable chill time, best wishes from Britain 👍🇬🇧🇦🇺

  • @BrokeFarmer
    @BrokeFarmer Год назад

    So glad I came across your channel needed this video

  • @nctrailcam81
    @nctrailcam81 Год назад

    Thanks for the great tips. I am way over in North Carolina. My main problems have been deer and woodchucks. The woodchucks can find their way through most types of fencing if you are not careful. I have been using wooden raised beds for 20 years, but thanks to you am switching to the Birdies beds. With my wooden beds (~50cm high) cats used to hop up into them to sharpen their claws on the tops of the boards until I put in fencing.

  • @thexalon
    @thexalon Год назад +3

    One thing I'll mention with regards to fencing: Deer at least in my area will respond to fencing even if it's not fully surrounding the garden nor too high for them to jump it. Like the raised beds, the extra effort to jump over it that would be necessary if they needed to escape a predator is enough to deter them a lot of the time.

  • @joshlovegood9392
    @joshlovegood9392 Год назад

    Brilliant Mark! Apparently Teddy Bears deter Bush Turkeys.. Enjoy that Black Sapote, it's a life-changing fruit! Make sure it is super soft and gross looking on the outside until you cut it open!

  • @sgrvtl7183
    @sgrvtl7183 Год назад

    Great information! Thank you for sharing

  • @keyphabenyisrael3219
    @keyphabenyisrael3219 Год назад +1

    From what I looked up online, those bush turkeys not only have the nerve to reek havoc in a garden, but they aren't even good eatin'!

  • @helenmccormick1982
    @helenmccormick1982 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing your great advice & ideas!

  • @hubertnnn
    @hubertnnn Год назад +3

    You forgot about the best way of dealing with pests:
    Adding them to your food.

  • @amandaduckett8321
    @amandaduckett8321 Год назад

    I'm from Shropshire England UK 🇬🇧 and love watching your videos

  • @TdotTwiFic
    @TdotTwiFic Год назад

    A video just came out from The Weedy Gardener in Australia about bush turkeys, and Geoff Lawton gave him his protection trick of the trade, teddy bear stuffies. He did a video time-lapse of the area and the bush turkey came up, saw the teddy, and left. Interesting idea. Now I am thinking teddy statues with the owl statues, the nomes, the lions and buddha. What a delightful garden that would be.

  • @casualnorm
    @casualnorm Год назад +1

    Thank you

  • @florl.delgado4093
    @florl.delgado4093 Год назад

    LOOOOOVED this video.
    I'm so lucky to be subscribed to you. Such a great man. Thank you for sharing ❣️

  • @rosieviz
    @rosieviz Год назад

    Thank you for the information, I think this has been my favorite video so far. I enjoy all your videos.

  • @Brisbanegardener
    @Brisbanegardener Год назад

    Thanks for your videos Mark, watched some old videoes as well. learning a lot.

  • @seulgiim7233
    @seulgiim7233 Год назад

    You are so knowledgable!! Thanks for the tips. I always wondered how you protect your garden from possums and bush turkeys. Now I know

  • @NotMuchHere
    @NotMuchHere Год назад

    I got some of your fruit bags and they saved 3 apples on a young tree from squirrels! They tore up the bag but we got 3 apples!!! Kujos to you!

  • @annettebanks6022
    @annettebanks6022 Год назад

    Nice to see you back.

  • @wayne8113
    @wayne8113 Год назад

    Thanks Mark

  • @teenagardner3623
    @teenagardner3623 Год назад

    Thank you so much for great video and many useful tips as always.

  • @lolitachildress-shay2168
    @lolitachildress-shay2168 Год назад

    Great as usual. God Bless you and your family.

  • @6alance95
    @6alance95 29 дней назад

    Thanks for the great video

  • @Transformed13
    @Transformed13 Год назад

    “Two birds with one stone….” Lol!!! Brother, I love your property! Especially the open range for the chickens! I don’t think I’ll ever do anything at this scale but you have some brilliant ideas! Can’t get enough of your videos. Do you have a tik tok? If not…. Please do!

  • @WNWKZ
    @WNWKZ Год назад +1

    I'll be having a coffee out in my veggie patch and suddenly see one of those brown moths flying through so I chase it away! I may look crazy but those army caterpillars do a heck of a lot of damage if they're able to get big enough

  • @approofarm
    @approofarm Год назад

    I really love watching your videos!

  • @samantharose2759
    @samantharose2759 Год назад

    Great video 🥰 thanks for sharing your awesome tips. I find them very helpful

  • @smas3256
    @smas3256 Год назад

    We have 2 Scare crow motion detectors. A Blue Heron visits our goldfish pond. It dropped one fish in the dirt as it was getting sprayed. We were able to revive it. The year before it swallowed down Big Mama.

  • @kirstenmordacz3596
    @kirstenmordacz3596 Год назад

    I have a very small vege patch in a very small garden, but we live across the road from a bush land park, & we think a possum / some critter, was feeding on our patch ,which is close to trees. So my Husband put up a spotlight with movement sensor, we’ve had no trouble since! 😄👏💕😍Qld follower 🇦🇺

  • @kimbergman1670
    @kimbergman1670 Год назад

    Thank you again Mark, you are an absolute legend 👏

  • @singncarpenter6270
    @singncarpenter6270 Год назад

    Good advice. Thanks Mark.

  • @margaretfoster492
    @margaretfoster492 Год назад

    Great stuff. I have issues with moles.

  • @darcynr1
    @darcynr1 Год назад

    I love your videos. They are so great to watch and I learn a lot from them. So much so that I started my own back jared gardening. So thanks for making them and keep it up.

  • @gardeningingatineau
    @gardeningingatineau Год назад

    Your content is awesome. Watching from Canada

  • @dc8202
    @dc8202 Год назад

    Great advice and tips. Always enjoy your video's, learn heaps from you so thanks for continuing to share 👍. Cheers, 😊

  • @The-Grateful-Hippie
    @The-Grateful-Hippie Год назад +6

    My issue here in Virginia is deer! I have learned that a particular deer family like to bed down just to the east of my garden in the side yard. There's two steep hills on the back corner of our lot so they have felt safe here for awhile. I've gone out and scared them off in the evening with flashlights and I got a orbit water sprayer too. I tried the invisible fence ( fishing line) that that worked for a bit but my sweet potato plants keep getting eaten. I need a permit to build a permanent fence so I'm trying to decide what I want to do for next year. I'm hoping that once the fawns grow up they will learn to avoid our lot.

    • @dylanzrim3635
      @dylanzrim3635 Год назад +1

      I mean you “could” get a pew-pew and harvest one, I know you’re a hippy but it might be the only way to avoid them associating humans with safety.
      Ofcourse if you don’t feel comfortable eating it it would make great fertiliser, and obviously if you’re against that kinda thing altogether disregard this entire comment
      Edit: I wrote this before watching the video

    • @Gardeningchristine
      @Gardeningchristine Год назад +1

      Not sure how big the area is you want to protect but my parents have an 8x12 foot plot for a garden and they put up 6 foot chicken wire fence. Drove 2x4s in the corners and stapled it to them. It’s worked so far. They do still eat anything that grows outside the fence though.

    • @The-Grateful-Hippie
      @The-Grateful-Hippie Год назад +2

      @@dylanzrim3635 Well my handle on here is more for by business. We eat venison all the time and we are extremely grateful for it. Nothing better than a double Bambi with cheese, tacos or a pressure cooked neck roast 😋. We source local and diverse, trying to cut out as much factory farming as we can. Now being in town we have to be careful as there is not really a safe place to drop one of we miss. Although I'm not apposed to opening my bedroom window and dropping one at very close range.

    • @The-Grateful-Hippie
      @The-Grateful-Hippie Год назад +1

      @@Gardeningchristine I've got 6 4x8 raised beds ( high side like Mark's) with probably 3 feet in between each pair. 2 rows of 3. I've got a big forsythia bush at one end , a steep hill on the back side ( that I can't walk but the deer have no problem) and an open ish area in the back corner. I'm planning to add more beds in the future. I just need to figure out where I want them since we have large in ground rocks over there too. I'd like to combine a fence with a flower boarder since the marigolds have tried to take over the raised beds.

    • @mitchtillison
      @mitchtillison Год назад +2

      I strongly recommend having a look at 3D fencing. It stopped them cold at my place when my garden was the only green spot during a long drought.

  • @helengoode9281
    @helengoode9281 Год назад

    Thank God your back! I was having withdrawals.

  • @nnagle9224
    @nnagle9224 Год назад

    I love your humor.

  • @GKW25308
    @GKW25308 Год назад

    I've had a bat tangled in a cheap e bay net with large 20mm holes that I put over my orange tree. Had to call the professionals in to untangle and remove the bat as it was screaming in the middle of the night. Not something I ever want to go through again. If you're going to net a tree, pay a bit extra and get proper netting not the cheap stuff. It also has the added benefit of being a LOT easier to put on and take off.

  • @JuJu-DnC22
    @JuJu-DnC22 Год назад +2

    I smashed that play button so fast.
    Also I didn’t know Bush turkeys could do so much damage. I’ll be keeping an eye out for our local ones here in suburban sydney ( near the river there’s lots of nests in the parklands )

  • @michs1708
    @michs1708 Год назад

    Excellent tips Mark!
    We starting our veggie garden in Melbourne suburbia
    And there are a number of pest to address. Birds bugs and possums. All these tip are helpful! Cheers

  • @Mistermeena1
    @Mistermeena1 Год назад

    If you got a big spindle full of sold writable CDs you no longer use, they perform the same role as sparkly tape really nicely

  • @vonheise
    @vonheise Год назад +1

    Turkey legs make a great addition to any meal! A pellet gun is almost silent...

  • @michaelwilbur4320
    @michaelwilbur4320 Год назад +1

    I live in Central part of the U.S. I enjoy watching your videos Mark and the info is very useful even though we are several thousand miles apart

  • @Heavens-Humanaterian-Army
    @Heavens-Humanaterian-Army Год назад

    Thanks Mark love it...great advise