Hot pepper, toilet paper tubes and Irish Spring

A list of 13 ways to deter pests and creatures from your garden.

This is what it all comes down to.  A few simple items that will either make or break our summer garden fort, made with Jack and the Beanstalk beans. I’ve been reading with horror about the varmints and diseases that will likely attack my pests once I place the plants for our 20-foot bean fort into their final growing spot at the lake. Lord knows, there are plenty of creatures up there willing to take a snack out of our foilage. The list includes deer, skunk, rabbits, groundhogs — all hungry, and ready to eat the plants.

Birth of 20 foot bean fort

So after fear, there comes great courage;, if you do your part to gather some research and facts. Good results come easier when you’re open yourself to moving with the flow of life, rather than against it. So, knowing that my kids will be eating many of the plants from the fort, and tromping among them with their hands and feet, I’m shying away from pesticides and herbicides. I’m going to be enviornmentally friendly, and organic, with my pest deterrent approach. Hopefully, the animals will sense what we’re trying to do and work with us to keep the plants safe. Ha! I can dream, can’t I?

This is what I’ve come up with:

  1. Epsom salts sprinkled on the plants will make them bitter tasting to groundhogs and rabbits. The advantage to this method is that Epsom Salts can also be used to fertilize the plants. The downside, of course, is that the rain will wash away the Epsom salts, and I won’t be there to sprinkle more Salts, as we’ll return from the lake to tie up the school year. But, I’ll use it as long as I can.
  2. Ammonia-soaked rags can be strewn along the perimeter of the garden, forming a stinky barrier to repel groundhogs, rabbits, skunks and opossoms. I am no stranger to this treatment. Once again, this will fade before I can reapply the treatment.
  3. The reason the Groundhog is afraid of its shadow is obviously because he’s a fraidy cat. So, they run from any thing with motion. I might try hanging aluminum foil strips or pie pans from chicken wire. Pinwhells can even work, I’ve read.
  4. Always, the best solution, I’ve learned is simply a fence. Using chickenwire, the fence will need to be buried underground, at least 12-18 inches, and 2 feet above the ground.
  5. Plastic netting works for deer, raccons and opossoms. The idea is to string the netting on bamboo poles, leaving about 8 inches in front of hte garden, laid out in front like a mat. Racoons have senstive feet, and they don’t like walking across the netting.
  6. Dial deodorant soap, and Irish Spring soap contains “tallow” which repels deer. Soap made with coconut oil will not repel the deer. Here’s the trick: Leave the soap in the package, to prevent the rain from washing away the soap too quickly. Drill holes in the soap so that you can run a string through the soap to hang them from trees, or the fence erected to get rid of groundhogs. Plan on one bar of soap for every three feet.
  7. Castor oil is supposed to keep moles, groundhogs, chipmunks and squirrels away. Here’s a recipe. 1 tablespoon of Castor oil. 2 tablespoons liquid dish washing soap, 6 tablespoons of water. Put oil and soap in blender and mix until you have shaving cream. Add water, and continue to mix. Pour concoction in watering can, and pour over the yard. Again, the problem with this is, you must re-apply after the rain.
  8. A horizontal border could be as simple as laying down crumpled black plastic, newspaper or aluminium foil, held in placed with rocks. Raccoons and skunks hate to walk on this stuff.
  9. I could sprinkle black and cayenne pepper around plants to keep rabbits away. This also works for insects that eat plants. Lucky for me, I can buy a solution called Hot Pepper Wax that will adhere to the plants, and not wash away after rains. The company recommends you reapply every three weeks. This one will work.
  10. Plant cucumbers. Raccoons and skunks hate cucumbers. But I wonder what will eat the cucumbers instead?
  11. This one is my favorite… for slugs. Cut paper towel or toilet paper cardboard tubes and push them into the ground, around the plants, so that slugs can’t reach the stems, or the leaves! Pus the tubes into the ground so that the sleeve of the tube protects the plant from beneath, comes above the around at least 4 inches around the stem of the plant.
  12. There’s no way around making this Manure Tea. Apparently, it prevents seedlings from getting diseases. Recipe: 1 shovel full of fresh or aged manure. 1 burlap bag. 1 5-gallon bucket of water. Put manure in bag. Tie the bag shut and put in bucket, and fill bucket. Leave a handle on the burlap outside the bucket, dry, so you can pull it out. Let the tea sit for 2-3 days, then pull out the tea bag. This tea is too strong to put directly on seedlings, so before using the tea, dilute it with more water, so that it looks like weak iced tea. Now, the diluted tea can be sprinkled over the seedlings.
  13. Hydrogen Peroxide Spray. If a fungal or bacterial disease his hit the plants, despite the manure tea, I’ll make this spray. 1 Tablespoon of 35 percent hydrogen peroxide. 1 gallon of water. Mix the hydrogen peroxide into the water. Wear gloves when using this. You can use this to prevent disease, by spraying once a week, (or more if it’s raining a lot). But, they caution to wait until transplants are established before these are sprayed.

This is going to be a lot of work. But, I’m up for it. So, any ideas you’d care to pass on from your own experience? I need them!

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26 Comments

While at the lake, WiFi is seriously lacking in my life... I can't wait to read your comments.
  1. wonderful! I just kirtsy’d you!

  2. My father who loved gardening both flowers and fruits/veggies…used tobacco. All kinds…and it worked like a charm!! For cutworms even.

    Great list.

    Stop by mine if you have time!!

  3. I really love gardening, even though I’m rubbish at it. Just wish my garden wasn’t so big, though ;-)

  4. Wow, these are some great ideas. Good to know. I just planted our garden last weekend. Happy TT!!

  5. I bet you’ll have a serious garden. I only like to garden in April and October! But that doesn’t work very well.

  6. I remember those battles with the deer and my new roses. The deer always won!

    SJR
    The Pink Flamingo

  7. Great list, I garden, but my yard is fenced in and my garden is fenced in too. I do use Sevin Dust in the garden around the plants to help control the nasty plant eating bugs, but other than that, I am pretty natural with gardening. My TT is up too.

  8. This is a great list, and very useful because this is the first I’ve heard of most of them! Happy TT :)

  9. The chipmunks LOVE to play hide and seek in my mint :-)

  10. A very useful TT -
    Thank you!

  11. Any idea what keeps the bugs away? With a rooftop container garden groundhogs and deer aren’t much of an issue (we don’t have them anyway), but the bugs are decimating my herbs!

  12. You come up with the best stuff. We have not gotten more extreme than window boxes we can bring in and cabbage leaves to distract slugs and hoping against hope!

  13. No clue about how else to be helpful; you’re a more advanced organic gardener than I am.

    The fort sounds AMAZING. I am in awe.

  14. Plates of beer will help with slugs and snails. Happy TT.

  15. wow very interesting. Thanks for all the information. I hope they work for you and I’m going to do a couple myself. Hope they work. Happy TT

  16. wow thanks cool ideas i think I will try the ammonia

  17. Fence, fence, go for the fence! Thanks for all of the other ideas - think I’ll skip the Manure Tea–there’s enough weird stuff to deal with just raising three boys and having a labrador retriever. Manure, I definitely don’t need more of, even though I’m sure it works fantastically.

  18. Raccoons and skunks hate cucumbers? That’s fascinating! I wonder why…

    Great TT!

  19. From what I’ve heard the all time best pest deterrent is human piss. Give your boys lots of lemonade and send them out to the garden to write their names.

  20. Interesting!!
    I don’t have anything though…

  21. this will be really helpful for me this summer with our veggie garden. Thanks!

    i’ve also heard that putting out shallow plates of beer kills slugs and snails, they crawl in for a drink and drown

  22. About the only thing that’s kept our cats from turning supermum’s herb garden into a bed or a toilet is a forest of bamboo barbecue skewers.

  23. [...] I’m coming home to get some needed R&RMy huband has shaved his legsHot pepper, toilet paper tubes and Irish SpringThis is what I’ll miss when they’re all in schoolAlmost didn’t make itWhen [...]

  24. [...] hill serves us wellI’m coming home to get some needed R&RMy huband has shaved his legsHot pepper, toilet paper tubes and Irish SpringThis is what I’ll miss when they’re all in schoolAlmost didn’t make [...]

  25. [...] of deer, bunnies, raccoons and slugs – even though I ran out of time to protect it properly with red pepper, Irish Spring Soap or toilet paper tubes. We opened the doors of the van before my husband even hit the brakes, the little boys, even more [...]

  26. [...] farmer from my favorite childhood show, Lucy’s Toy Shop. Then, relying on my solutions from Hot Pepper, Toilet Paper Tubes and Irish Spring. Hot Pepper Wax has been difficult to find. Still, I had two very large, and fragrant, chive plants [...]

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