shooterdon
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If mice were smart, coyotes, foxes, hawks etc would have a rough time.
I have brown and gray squirrels. Anything I put out to kill the brown squirrels will inevitably get the gray ones I don't want to kill.I’ve been using the 5 gal buckets for years now. I catch a few mice and a few chipmunks almost daily but never caught a squirrel in one.
Been there, done that, got the shirt. I suggest letting them be. Drive over the tunnels with your mower or ATV so they don't open up. Eventually they will exhaust the food supply and abate. If you put out bird seed stop doing that. In the meanwhile think of it as free lawn aeration.Lately the ground squirrels have invaded my place. I have seen them occasionally, but now they are digging tunnels all around the house. I’ve tried the Havahart traps but no takers. I tried flooding out the tunnels, but that doesn’t seem to bother them either. I tried rat poison but they won’t touch it. I seldom see them, as they usually dig at night, so shooting them is not going to be very successful.
Any other ideas?
I’m not sure that I agree that they will exhaust the food supply and abate. I been dealing with them for 20 years and still trapping and removing them every spring.Been there, done that, got the shirt. I suggest letting them be. Drive over the tunnels with your mower or ATV so they don't open up. Eventually they will exhaust the food supply and abate. If you put out bird seed stop doing that. In the meanwhile think of it as free lawn aeration.
They were here first. I try to find a way to co-exist if possible (except for carpenter bees, those I wish extinction on) Populations should balance out unless someone is eradicating predators like coyotes, owls, and snakes. Logging and land clearing can also drive large numbers of displaced squirrels and rodents to move into an area. I have found that the fewer things I trap and kill the fewer problems I have in the long run.I’m not sure that I agree that they will exhaust the food supply and abate. I been dealing with them for 20 years and still trapping and removing them every spring.
Ground squirrels wouldn't be in the tree tops.I sit under the gazebo in my back yard with a 17HMR and pick them out of the tree tops regularly.
Tree squirrels don’t bother me. It’s those damn ground squirrels that tear everything up.I sit under the gazebo in my back yard with a 17HMR and pick them out of the tree tops regularly.
Looks like a chipmunk to meIf you know what a 'squinny' is, you're probably from Des Moines
In Des Moines, a “squinny” is what the rest of the country calls a ground squirrel. The origins of the term have been lost to history, forgotten like an acorn buried under the back porch.
It's about 10" long including the tail and weighs about 7 oz.
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If you see the whole picture, it has a long bushy tail like a tree squirrel. They are destructiveLooks like a chipmunk to me
Those are a different species than we have. Ours are grey with spots and a bushier tail.Yep, long bushy tail, 13 strips on its back and destructive.
I seldom see them posing like this. I usually see them standing up like my first pic above.
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Yep, long bushy tail, 13 strips on its back and destructive.
I seldom see them posing like this. I usually see them standing up like my first pic above.
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The bottom picture is also what we call a squirrelThose are a different species than we have. Ours are grey with spots and a bushier tail.
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