But who will catch them all and make them take the pill?looks like someone needs to invent a sterility pill for these pesky rascals good luck.
But who will catch them all and make them take the pill?
Rabbits are only fast for short bursts of speed. In a long run, about 40 yards or more, a person can run them down and catch them. It has to be in an open field where they have a long distance before they can get away. I can't do it now, but when I was young I could stop the tractor, jump off, and chase a rabbit down. That is why a dog can catch them. They tire out quickly and look for a place to hide. Once the rabbit knows you can run him down he will just lie still on the dirt. When you catch them, they sort of go into shock. They stop squeeling and act like they passed out. If you have enough open ground you can run any of them down if you are in good shape. They will gnaw on certain trees in winter even when they don't have out of control numbers. They will kill the younger fruit trees. Not that many rabbits around here, but we have to put chicken wire around young pear, plum, most any fruit trees. Once the trees get older and the bark gets thick and hard, they won't bother them anymore. We have to put chicken wire over greens in the winter garden too. Not just for rabbits, for the deer too. If there is plenty of other green grass or shrubbery around they don't eat the garden vegetables so much. In winter when the only green around is your winter garden of lettuce and greens, they will eat it all.I dunno if there's any contraceptive that'd work quickly enough (except maybe a '.22 short' lead 'pill' travelling at juuust sub-sonic velocity - only that's definitely not allowed where we are now, in a 'town'! Bloody re-zoning!), but I did 'catch' a few individual rabbits out of the hundreds that invaded my lawn last night - they were all a bit excitable on initial 'capture', then they rapidly calmed down and were no longer be in any condition to take any sort of 'pills' after I'd applied my fully approved and guaranteed effective 'manually applied rabbit calming technique'!
At least THEY aren't going to be breeding any more of the pesky varmints!
I'm sure they'll eventually breed up in numbers enough that they eventually eat themselves into starvation, only by then, there won't be much greenery left around!They've already eaten the Linear Park bare for quite a way in each direction, and now have started ring-barking trees and eating all the leaves and branches they can reach, so it's probably only a matter of time before they start climbing the trees to get to the growing shoots - don't laugh, I've seen them do that before! While the rabbit plague is really pretty much a State-wide problem, there's a growing community push here to get the local council to do something more than they have so far, even talk of demanding 'controlled shooting' &/or far more aggressive baiting programs. We'll see, I guess - but I don't think it'll be soon enough to save my lawn!
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My goodness, that is a real issue all the way around. Rabbits and now all the flood water.
Just thinking about all the dead ones and the smell. Seems like the country has a 'minor' problem to think about.
Unless they decide it's on the land owner to fix the problems. Good Luck with your plans.
Whatever they might be moving forward.![]()
Or just fire up the Barby and invite the neighbors!!!looks like someone needs to invent a sterility pill for these pesky rascals good luck.
Well, I am wondering how you are doing with your 'Rabbit Problem'.
Or just fire up the Barby and invite the neighbors!!!![]()
We still have the rabbit problem Mikey, just not around the veggies - in fact, we had one of our local Councillors around just the other day cos I'd been agitating so much about our rabbit problem out the front! She told me before she came that she too had a rabbit problem where she was (cos she sees a few rabbits around the place every night!) Mind you, she lives about 5 km away from the wetlands that we're only 200 metres from (and the Council managed wetlands is where the bleedin' wascally blighters have warrens and breed... well, like over-sexed rabbits!
) and she suggested that everyone in the district had an issue with rabbits atm, so she thought that we should probably just get used to it... after all, what harm can a few rabbits do?!
But at my insistence, she came out here to have a look at the scope of our problem anyway, arriving just after dusk (as I'd suggested), and the moment she got out of her car, climbed over the 1m high wire netting that I've got surrounding my tiny patch of lawn, chasing the dozen or so rabbits that'd already jumped into it out as she did (a poor remnant of a lawn that still gets ravaged every night by at least a few hundred rabbits) she started apologising!!
Apparently, she'd run over about a dozen rabbits just driving from the other end of our street, and before turning off the main drag into our street, for the very first time ever she'd seen the 'moving carpet' of rabbits that every night, come rain, hail, or high water, covers pretty much every bit of clear ground between us and the wetlands as soon as it starts to get dark! So I reckon it's finally started to sink in to her at least, and now at least one Councillor understands that while SHE really does NOT have a rabbit problem at all, WE have an all out rabbit plague to contend with!!
So yeah, we've still got a rabbit problem, at least out the front! But my veggie garden is in the back yard; a yard which is fully enclosed, bounded by the house on one side (solid brick construction on a concrete slab) and butting up to the back corners of the house, by a 1.8m high colourbond steel fence with a further 450mm of solid steel sheet sunk into the ground so they can't burrow thru underneath it, the fence completely enclosing the other 3 sides! I still inspect it daily, both inside and outside, usually filling in at least a half dozen spots where the rabbits have tried to burrow under anyway, only being stopped by the buried steel sheeting.
But while we don't have any rabbits in the back yard where the veggie garden is, I have had to add some 'possum deterrents' to the top of the fence, cos the rabbits have eaten just about everything the possums usually eat everywhere else, which means that every possum living within a radius of about 2 km now sees my veggie garden as one of the few sources of edible greens remaining within the area!! I was actually out there 'deterring' a possum (humanely, of course!) immediately before I came back inside, opened the Forum, saw your response above, and started this reply.
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I used these at my last house to keep skunks away. It worked for skunks. They say it works well for rabbits too. My cats used to sit at the windows at night and wait for the lights to go off and illuminate the wildlife. You might need more than they say for each square meter. Skunks did not like the things at all.
Google or look up on Amazon. Or lay AstroTurf.
Ultrasonic Rabbit Repeller – Solar Powered and Flashing Light – Get Rid of Rabbits