bobblehat
Mon 09-Jan-12 11:02:33
Hi,
We have a fairly bog standard garden, but a few months ago a new family moved in next door with 3 cats. These seem to have decided that our garden is their toilet, and the other day we managed to fill half a carrier bag with cat muck, a lot of it on the area we use for veggies in the summer.
We've been chasing them out of the garden when we see them, but I think a lot of it must me done at night as I'm here most of the day and rarely see them.
Any ideas for keeping them out?
For vegetable plots I use netting. I have gone to the trouble of actually making a frame from some softwood that gives me enough height to plant under. I bought netting from Harrods Horticultural (spency but long lived), use pegs to hold in place.
Works very well and I am happy to serve the food that we have grown ourselves.
bobblehat
Mon 09-Jan-12 13:16:05
That's the thing, in the state it is at the moment I really wouldn't want to eat anything off it. And I don't want the dc playing in it, because the cats are doing it on the lawn as well as flowerbeds/veggie patch
Get your own cat!
Cocoa shell mulch is very good at repelling cats.
Cocoa shell mulch only if you don't have a dog as it is toxic to them.
bobblehat
Tue 10-Jan-12 11:08:14
coco shell mulch, I'll have to investigate that. Caught one of them sniffing around the rabbit earlier...
Chestnutx3
Wed 11-Jan-12 10:12:34
battery operated cat scarers work really well. Don't work for rabbits though ( i have wild ones). Getting your cat is the most effective.
Lucylou75
Wed 11-Jan-12 16:51:00
I agree with Chestnutx3 about the cat scarers - I've tried using citronella and those granule repellents, but the sonic repeller is what solved my problem. I looked on Amazon, they do quite a few, but I went with this one because of the reviews (and it was cheaper than most others!): www.amazon.co.uk/PestBye-Battery-Operated-Cat-Repeller/dp/B004SGC75S/
Cheaper really than having to keep buying refills of repellent, just remember to use rechargeable batteries.
bobblehat
Thu 12-Jan-12 11:26:25
Thanks, but before I order a cat scarer. do you know if it affects rabbits, as we do have one of those?