News:

Picture posting is enabled for all :)

Main Menu

Moles

Started by naff, April 28, 2009, 23:26:08

Previous topic - Next topic

naff

How do you all control/remove moles from your garden/allotment? I,ve relocated them when we,ve caught them but they always seem to make their way back!! I can,t sit there with a fork all the time(my prefered way!!) and poisons do not appeal.They make a real mess of my deep/raised beds when they arrive on the hunt.I would rather not kill them if I can avoid it but sometimes have to or I,ll have no crops.I,m not normally too bothered about killing pests (I,m happy to cull the Magpie population and the Jays, both to save the songbird population locally) but moles ??

naff


teresa

If you open the mole hill and pour urine down ( they dont like the smell of it) and they move on you may have to do it to each mole hill but cheap and does not harm them or anything else. Morning samples are the strongest so get peeing in a bucket and collect in milk containers ( carmaglage ) good luck. you must have a good supply of worms on your lottie. ;D

Unwashed

I leave them to enjoy themselves, they do very little damage.
An Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace upon grounds of common right

staris

i have moles on my plot but i don't bother them, i've not had them do any damage other than the odd tunnel causing a few plants to topple over.

Baccy Man

Quote from: BTMR on October 12, 2009, 15:26:30
Many Allotment keepers will be interested to know that a great free service on our website has been launched which will help gardeners, allotment holders and house owners find a TRADITIONAL Molecatcher in their own area. They are not easy to find these days. www.britishmolecatchers.co.uk

Surely the same service is already offered by the well established Guild of British Molecatchers who allow their members to join free rather than charging them £75 per year as you do.

Robert_Brenchley

I don't know why we're getting these obviously commercial posts.

ceres

I advised BTMR a couple of days ago that commercial advertising isn't welcome.  I'm keeping an eye on it.

Obelixx

I have regular mole visitors.  They tunnel under the lawn and make molehills which are unsightly and can kill the grass if left.  Thetunnels collapse and make trences which if stepped in by teh unwary can give a nasty jar to foot or back and my back is dodgy enough already.  In the borders they tunnel through roots and lift new plants so do damage there and it's the same in the fruit and veg garden. 

I have found two live ones above surdface and relocated them to woods across a nearby stream.  Other than that, it's war.  Here in Belgium we can buy a device that blows the perishers up so they become compost.    It's called a détaupeur and you can google for info but I belive they're not legal in the UK.

I tried humane traps to no avail and the usual tricks such as urine, empty bottles, moth balls, sonic scarers.    The blaster is the best although our recently acquired dog is very good at unearthing them - with disastrous colateral damage to the lawn and borders.  If you  can find a mole catcher, he'll be worth his fee.
Obxx - Vendée France

Unwashed

Like I say, I love the little chaps, but if you have to, this is the standard work on the subject.
An Agreement of the People for a firm and present peace upon grounds of common right

Flighty

Unwashed it's always good to watch that again and have a good laugh!  :)
Flighty's plot,  http://flightplot.wordpress.com,  is my blog.

I support the Gardening with Disabilities Trust, http://www.gardeningwithdisabilitiestrust.org.uk

telboy

Naff,
This subject has been on before.
I used to use a very effective 'Pill' which one has to have a licence for.
Won't expand on this. It's evil but effective.
Trouble is - if you study the antics of the little buggers - the progeny always return!!
>:(
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

Robert_Brenchley

Young moles move around a lot looking for a territory, and I think they're fussy about soil conditions. There have been moles in exactly the same restricted areas in Oxford since I was a kid. So if you have the right conditions for them, you're always liable to have another move in.

Powered by EzPortal